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Swimming, Overtraining,Recovery and Norepinephrine by Owen Anderson

By DMorgan
Created 03/25/2006 - 3:06pm

 

Reprinted with permission from www.Bodybuilding.com

To reach peak levels of performance, athletes need to find a way to blend very hard training with exactly the right amounts of rest and recovery. Finding this optimal balance between work and recovery is a very difficult challenge.


Unsure About Recovery Time

The main problem is not that athletes don't do enough work: indeed, they usually pile on too much work and fail to devote enough time to recovery. But the fact is that many athletes are unsure about how much recovery they need after each quality workout, and also about how much rest to build into each week, month and year of training.

This is unfortunate, because an athlete's pattern of recovery can make or break his/her entire training program.

Physiological Details Of Recovery

 


Practical Concerns

But most athletes don't care too much about the specific physiological details of recovery. Instead, they want answers to practical questions, such as:

 

Fortunately, there are relatively straightforward answers to these questions, and these are particularly important for athletes and coaches who believe that performance can be optimized by training at an extremely high level - very close to the point of overtraining.

Risking Overtraining

 

[2]How To Benefit From Planned Overtraining!
What is overtraining, and can we benefit from it? Well overtraining itself is not what you want, however over-reaching by design can be a good thing. To get more detail on this topic continue below.
[ Click here [3] to learn more. ]


In Search Of Reliable Indicators

Exercise physiologists have made a serious attempt to help athletes monitor their training and recovery and avoid the overtrained state. Physiologists who are interested in recovery have noted that athletes who perform very well after tapering tend to show the following traits toward the ends of their recovery periods: improved muscular strength and power, fewer sleep disturbances, reduced stress and fatigue, lower rates of perceived exertion during exercise, lower heart beats during activity, and brighter overall mood.

In the light of these encouraging findings, scientists have gone on to explore whether these variables could be used as reliable indicators of effective recovery.

In one study, scientists monitored a group of swimmers over a six-month season of training and competition, paying special attention to their ratings of wellbeing (eg fatigue, stress and muscle soreness) during a recovery (tapering) period.

 

[4] [5] [6]
Click To Enlarge.
Kicking Drill For The Breaststroke. Learn More [7].

They found that simple measures of wellbeing were reasonably good at predicting competitive performance improvement, accounting for 72% of the variation in improvement in race times compared with previous bests1.

Australian Study

 

 

 

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Maximum
Heart Rate
 
 


A Neat Adaptation By The Body To Too Much Training

What conclusions can we draw from this? Bear in mind that norepinephrine is primarily secreted by nerve cells in the sympathetic nervous system, with the effect of elevating heart rate and boosting the rate of breakdown of glycogen and fat for energy.

It also enhances cardiac contractility, allowing the heart to pump more blood per beat. Thus, it would be logical to assume that a rise in norepinephrine levels would be advantageous - a hoped-for outcome during recovery.

Norepinephrine
Norepinephrine, known as noradrenaline outside the USA, is one of the 'stress hormones' and affects parts of the human brain where attention and impulsivity are controlled.

Along with epinephrine this compound effects the fight-or-flight response, activating the sympathetic nervous system to directly increase heart rate, release energy from fat, and increase muscle readiness.

It is released from the adrenal glands as a hormone into the blood.

Quite The Opposite

 


A Reliable Marker?

The Australian research is in line with other work in this area, and therefore it appears that norepinephrine could serve as a decent and reliable marker of training progress and work-recovery balance. If norepinephrine shot up, it could well be a time to enhance recovery and cut back on total training load; declines in norepinephrine, on the other hand, would be a sign that training was going swimmingly.

The trouble with this approach, however, is that few athletes have the medical and/or financial resources necessary to monitor plasma norepinephrine on a regular basis. That being the case, what other - more convenient - tools could be used to assess the adequacy of recovery?

Heart-Rate Monitoring

 

Wellbeing & Mood States

 


Wellbeing Quiz

There are many different ways to assess wellbeing, but I have found the following 'quiz' an extremely handy way to monitor training load and recovery in the athletes I coach. There are only six points, and the whole test takes less than one minute to complete. Simply rate each statement on a 1-5 scale as follows: 1 = Strongly Disagree; 2 = Disagree; 3 = Neutral; 4 = Agree; 5 = Strongly Agree.


Question #1
I slept really well last night.

 


Question #2
I am looking forward to today's workout.

 


Question #3
I am optimistic about my future performance(s).

 


Question #4
I feel vigorous and energetic.

 


Question #5
My appetite is great.

 


Question #6
I have very little muscle soreness.

Evaluate yourself in this manner each morning when you are ready to start your day. If your total score is 20 or above, your overall state of recovery is pretty good and you have probably recovered enough to carry out a high-quality workout on that day. If your total score is below 20, it is probably a good idea to rest or work easily until your score rises again.

This checklist can also be used during tapering periods to determine how well your recovery is going. If you have been training close to the borderline of overtraining before tapering, you could start the tapering period with a score of 15-18 (a lower score may indicate that you are already stale or overtrained). As the tapering period progresses, your score should rise steadily. In fact, the optimal situation would be for your ratings to reach 'flood stage' of 27-30 just before your major competition.

Naturally, for this exam to be valid you have to believe in the whole notion of recovery. If you are one of those athletes who gets depressed when you can't punish yourself on a daily basis, then all bets are off.

On the other hand, if you can trust your body to adapt to reduced training and increased recovery with sizable gains in fitness, the little quiz will usually work well for you, encouraging you to avoid hard work on days when you need an easy schedule and undertake challenging efforts when you are ready. Overall, it will make you a fitter athlete - an individual who can achieve new peaks in performance.  www.Bodybuilding.com


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