Article Text
Abstract
Aim To examine symptoms indicative of respiratory tract and gastrointestinal infections and determine risk factors for such symptoms in elite cross-country skiers.
Methods Self-reported training and symptom data for 37 elite cross-country skiers from 2007 to 2015 were analysed using multilevel logistic regression equations with symptom incidence and duration as outcome variables, and sex, performance level, season, competition, air travel, altitude exposure and training characteristics as independent variables.
Results Data for 7016 person-weeks were analysed, including 464 self-reported infection events and 110 959 h of training. Athletes reported median (range) 3 (1–7) respiratory tract and/or gastrointestinal events per year, with symptoms lasting 5 (1–24) days. During the winter, symptoms occurred more frequently (OR 2.09, p<0.001) and lasted longer (b=0.043, p<0.001) compared with summer. Competition and air travel increased the risk of symptoms, with ORs of 2.93 (95% CI 2.24 to 3.83) and 4.94 (95% CI 3.74 to 6.53), respectively (p<0.001). Athletes with higher training monotony had lower risk of symptoms (OR 0.87 (95% CI 0.73 to 0.99), p<0.05). Other training variables were not associated with symptoms. Athletes who had won an Olympic/World Championship medal reported shorter symptom duration compared with less successful athletes (b=−0.019, p<0.05) resulting in significantly fewer symptomatic days/year (14 (6–29) vs 22 (8–43) days/year).
Conclusions Air travel and competition are major risk factors for acute respiratory tract and gastrointestinal symptoms in this population. Athletes who have large fluctuations in training load experience such symptoms more frequently. Shorter duration of symptoms appears to be associated with success in cross-country skiing.
- Risk factor
- Infection
- Athlete
- Travel
- Altitude
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Introduction
Reaching an international level in any sport requires a high volume of training, and elite endurance athletes typically train between 500 h1 ,2 and in excess of 1000 h/year,3–5 with elite cross-country skiers training approximately 800 h/year.6 In the general population, adults typically experience two to four respiratory tract infections (RTIs) per year.7 ,8 However, cross-sectional studies indicate that individuals with high training loads experience a greater frequency of upper RTIs.9 Furthermore, longitudinal studies with athletes report an increased infection incidence during periods of intense training or competition.10 ,11 Malm12 suggested that, although high training loads may suppress immunity, becoming a successful elite athlete requires an immune system capable of withstanding infections even during severe physiological and psychological stress. However, differences in infection susceptibility between the most successful athletes and their less successful counterparts, all of whom have similarly high training loads, have not been fully explored. It is possible that the ability to withstand and/or recover quickly from an infection, particularly during key training and competition periods, could be a predictor of success within an otherwise homogenous athlete group.
A recent study by Hellard et al11 investigated infection incidence among international swimmers over a 4-year period and found that infection rates were highest during the winter months and intensive training periods. However, it is not clear whether the same patterns for infection incidence are present for winter sports athletes, who compete during the winter months but typically undertake the highest training loads in the summer and autumn.6 Furthermore, other than high training loads, elite athletes are exposed to a number of additional stressors, such as frequent international travel, altitude exposure and the psychological pressure of competition, which may also influence infection susceptibility.13–15
The primary purpose of the study was to examine the incidence of symptoms indicative of RTI and gastrointestinal infection (GII) in elite cross-country skiers and to determine risk factors for such infections in this population. The secondary aim was to examine possible differences in the frequency and/or duration of symptoms between athletes that have won an Olympic/World Championship medal and the athletes that have not. It was hypothesised that heavy training loads and competition would significantly increase the risk of symptoms, and that athletes who had medalled at World or Olympic level would report fewer illness events.
Methods
Participants
This retrospective cohort study was based on self-reported training and symptom data from 39 elite male (n=22) and female (n=17) cross-country skiers for the period 1 May 2007 to 30 March 2015. Norwegian national team athletes are required to log their training data daily as a condition for receiving an annual stipend. Athletes were recruited via convenience sampling using the following inclusion criteria: (1) selected to represent the Norwegian national senior or recruit team for cross-country skiing during the analysed time period, (2) over 18 years of age and (3) having recorded their day-to-day training from junior to senior level in detail. As of 30 March 2015, 16 of these athletes (9 males and 7 females) had won at least one individual senior Olympic or World Championship medal (totalling 73 individual Olympic and World Championship medals between them). These athletes were categorised as world leading (WL), while those athletes that had not won an individual Olympic or World Championship medal were categorised as international level (IL). All athletes provided written, informed consent for their data to be included in the study, which was approved by the Loughborough University Ethical Review Committee and registered with the Norwegian Data Protection Authority.
Definition of symptoms
Athletes recorded training and symptoms in spreadsheet training diaries designed by the Norwegian Ski Federation or, since 2012, in the web-based version developed by the Norwegian Olympic Federation (http://www.olt-dagbok.net). Each day included a ‘parametrics’ and a ‘free text’ field where athletes recorded symptoms and whether training was discontinued or modified owing to illness or injury, acute medication use, days of travel and days spent at altitude. On the basis of the definitions proposed by Matthews et al,16 an infection event was defined as an athlete reporting one or more symptoms indicative of RTI or GII on two or more consecutive days, or when symptoms were severe enough that training was completely discontinued on at least 1 day. Symptoms had to be separated by a minimum of 7 days in order to be categorised as two separate events. Only symptoms likely due to RTI or GII were retained for analyses. These included upper respiratory tract symptoms (blocked or runny nose, sore throat, sneezing), lower respiratory tract symptoms (coughing, sputum, chest congestion, wheezing, fever) and gastrointestinal symptoms (nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, abdominal pain). Each event was categorised as either symptoms indicative of RTI or symptoms indicative of GII. The number of days of symptoms of each event was recorded.
Categorisation of training
The training recorded for each session included total training time for different training forms (endurance, strength/power, sprint, etc) and intensity zone (table 1). Rolling 1-day, 3-day and 7-day averages for total training volume, the volume of high-intensity training and the volume of strength/power/sprint training were calculated. Training impulse17 (TRIMP=training duration (min)×intensity (HR zone 1–5)), training monotony (mean TRIMP/SD TRIMP) and training stress (TRIMP×training monotony) scores18 were also calculated. In addition, the number of competitions, number of international flights and number of days at altitude (≥1500 m above sea level (masl)) during the previous 1, 3 and 7 days were calculated.
Statistical analysis
To explore which factors were associated with onset of symptoms, multilevel modelling was employed using MLwiN software (V.2.32, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK). Multilevel logistic regression equations were constructed to predict symptom incidence, which was treated as a binary (0=did not report symptoms, 1=did report symptoms) outcome variable. First, we explored whether symptoms occurred more frequently for males compared with females (0=males, 1=female), for athletes of different performance levels (0=IL, 1=WL), during different times of year (spring (March–May), summer (June–August), autumn (September–November) and winter (December–February)) and during different training phases (transition phase, general preparation phase, specific preparation phase, competition phase, regeneration phase) by including these as categorical independent variables in separate multilevel models. Training variables, air travel, altitude exposure and competition were entered into separate models as independent variables to determine unadjusted ORs. In order to disaggregate within-person and between-person associations, each participant's aggregate for each variable was centred on the grand mean and entered into the level 2 equation to determine whether an individual with higher average values for that independent variable had a higher incidence of symptomatic episodes, compared with an individual with lower average values (between-person relationships). Each variable was also centred on each participant's unique mean and entered into the level 1 equation to determine whether fluctuations around an individual's average were associated with changes in symptom incidence (within-person relationships). ORs for training variables represent the increase in risk of symptoms occurring as a result of a 1 h/week increase in that training variable, or a 10% increase in training monotony, training stress and TRIMP. On the basis of the unadjusted models described above, adjusted logistic multilevel models were constructed with all significant independent variables from the unadjusted models included. Multilevel regression equations were also constructed to determine whether sex, performance level, type of symptoms (RTI or GII), season, training phase or training load during illness were significantly associated with duration of symptoms. Results are reported as the median with range, unless otherwise stated. Significance was accepted at the p<0.05 level.
Results
In total, from 39 athletes, 7436 person-weeks of data were collected. Of these, two athletes (316 person-weeks) were excluded owing to inadequate detail in the recording of symptoms. For two athletes, one season was excluded per athlete owing to confirmed cases of mononucleosis, while data for previous and/or subsequent seasons were retained. A total of 7016 person-weeks were therefore included in the final analysis. These included 464 events of GII and RTI, 110 959 h of training, 3812 competitions, 1769 international flights and 4879 days at altitude >1500 masl. Of all the training recorded, 91% was endurance training and 9% was strength/power/sprint training (table 2). Of endurance training, 90% was at low intensity (I-zone 1 and 2) and 10% was at high intensity (I-zone 3–5).
Symptom incidence
All of the athletes reported at least one episode of RTI or GII during the analysed time period. However, there was considerable interindividual variation in the number and duration of symptomatic episodes, with athletes reporting 3.4 (0.6–6.8) events and 19 (6–43) days of symptoms per year. Of these, 410 events were RTI, equivalent to 3.0 events per athlete per year, and 54 events were GII, equivalent to 0.4 events per athlete per year. About 16% of athletes experienced ≥6 events per year and were hence categorised as ‘illness prone’. The average duration of symptoms was 5 (1–24) days, with this being significantly longer for RTI compared with GII (5±4 vs 3±2 days, b=−1.294, p<0.001).
Risk factors for RTI and GII
Unadjusted and adjusted ORs for all the candidate risk factors are presented in tables 3 and 4. Analysing respiratory tract symptoms separately from gastrointestinal symptoms did not affect which variables were associated with onset of symptoms.
Sex, performance level and family situation
Sex was not a significant risk factor for either symptom incidence or symptom duration, and nor was living in a household with young children However, performance level was significantly associated with the duration of symptoms, with this being lower for WL athletes (b=−0.019, p=0.034). Consequently, WL athletes reported a lower total number of symptomatic days/year compared with IL athletes (14 (6–29) vs 22 (8–43) days/year), despite no significant between-group differences in training load, number of flights, competitions or days spent at altitude.
Time of year
Athletes experienced significantly more symptomatic events during autumn, winter and spring compared with summer, with the highest probability of symptoms during the winter months (OR (95% CI) 2.09 (1.59 to 2.73), p<0.001 vs summer). However, when adjusted for other independent variables, the highest risk of symptoms was in the spring (OR (95% CI) 2.09 (1.09 to 3.99), p<0.001 vs summer). Regarding training phase, the highest probability of symptoms was during the competition phase which was from January to March (OR (95% CI) 1.68 (1.35 to 2.09), p<0.001 vs general preparation phase), but training phase was no longer a significant risk factor when accounting for other variables. Season was also significantly associated with symptom duration, with symptoms reported during autumn (b=0.024, p<0.01), winter (b=0.043, p<0.001) and spring (b=0.037, p<0.001) typically persisting for longer than those reported during the summer.
Competition, air travel and altitude exposure
International air travel was associated with unadjusted ORs of 4.53 (3.49 to 5.88) of reporting symptoms indicative of infection within the next day, 2.73 (2.25 to 3.31) of reporting symptoms within the next 3 days and 1.78 (1.52 to 2.06) of reporting symptoms within the next 7 days (all p<0.001). When accounting for other independent variables, air travel was associated with adjusted ORs of 4.94 (3.74 to 6.53), 2.66 (2.17 to 3.26) and 1.59 (1.36 to 1.85) of reporting symptoms within 1, 3 and 7 days, respectively (all p<0.001). Indeed, 35% of all recorded events were associated with an international flight during the preceding 72 h. Of the 1769 flights recorded, 53% were outbound and 47% were homebound, while 95% were continental and 5% intercontinental. Homebound flights were more likely to be associated with the athlete subsequently reporting symptoms compared with outbound flights (14% vs 5%), as were intercontinental flights compared with continental flights (17% vs 9%). Taking part in a competition was associated with unadjusted ORs of 2.74 (2.18 to 3.45) of an athlete reporting symptoms within the next day, 1.75 (1.57 to 1.95) of an athlete reporting symptoms within the next 3 days and 1.45 (1.35 to 1.55) of an athlete reporting symptoms within the next 7 days (all p<0.001). When accounting for other independent variables, competition was associated with adjusted ORs of 2.93 (2.24 to 3.83), 1.78 (1.56 to 2.03) and 1.51 (1.38 to 1.66) of an athlete reporting symptoms within 1, 3 and 7 days, respectively (all p<0.001).
Exposure to altitude of ≥1500 masl was associated with an unadjusted OR of 1.05 (1.01 to 1.10) (p<0.05) of an athlete reporting symptoms within the next 7 days, but it was no longer significantly associated with symptom onset when accounting for other independent variables.
Training
The only training variable that was a significant risk factor for symptom onset in unadjusted and adjusted models was training monotony. A 10% increase in between-person training monotony was associated with an unadjusted OR (95% CI) of 0.86 (0.79 to 0.93) (p<0.001) and remained significant when accounting for other variables (OR (95% CI) 0.87 (0.73 to 0.99), p<0.05). In unadjusted models, within-person increase in the volume of strength/power/sprint exercise was negatively associated with symptom onset (OR (95% CI) 0.83 (0.75 to 0.91)), while within-person, high-intensity endurance exercise was positively associated with symptom onset (OR (95% CI) 1.16 (1.03 to 1.31)). However, both became non-significant when accounting for other independent variables. Between-person total training volume and training stress were negatively associated with symptom onset in unadjusted models (OR (95% CI) 0.91 (0.85 to 0.98) and 0.97 (0.96 to 0.99), respectively) but became non-significant when adjusted for other independent variables. TRIMP was not a significant risk factor for symptom onset, nor was TRIMP during symptomatic episodes significantly associated with symptom duration.
The final adjusted multilevel model included the following variables, which were found to be significant predictors in the unadjusted models: season, training phase, competition, aircraft travel, altitude exposure, total training volume, volume of high-intensity training, volume of strength/power/sprint training and training monotony.
Discussion
Frequency and timing of symptoms of RTI and GII
Our data indicate that elite cross-country skiers experience three to four episodes of self-reported RTI and/or GII per year, with symptoms typically lasting 5 days. Few other studies have examined infection rates in athletes for periods of more than a few weeks or months. However, Hellard et al11 reported a similar frequency of infectious infection for elite swimmers who experienced, on average, four episodes of respiratory, gastrointestinal and/or urogenital infection per person-year. Hence, it appears that elite endurance athletes experience broadly similar infection rates, regardless of whether their competition season falls during the winter or summer months. GII and RTI rates for these athletes do not appear to deviate markedly from adults in the general population, who typically experience two to four RTIs per year.7 ,8
The Norwegian Institute of Public Health reports that the average Norwegian experiences 2.4 RTIs per year,19 compared with 3.0 among our group of athletes. Kuusi et al20 found that the incidence of acute gastroenteritis in a sample of Norwegians was 1.2 per person-year in the period 1999–2000. This is substantially higher than the 0.4 episodes per year reported by these elite cross-country skiers. However, similar to the current study, Hansdotter et al21 reported 0.3–0.4 events of acute gastrointestinal illness per person-year in Sweden in the period 2008–2009. Determining precise incidence rates of RTI and GII in the general population is challenging, since many may not report mild cold and influenza symptoms to the doctor. As such, we unfortunately do not have accurate epidemiological data on acute RTI and GII for the Norwegian general population specifically during the time period studied. However, it seems reasonable to conclude that, in general, elite cross-country skiers are no more prone to these types of infections compared to the general population. However, there does appear to be a high interindividual variability in infection susceptibility, even within a homogenous group of elite athletes. For the 37 athletes included in the current study, individual incidence rates ranged 1–7 events per year, despite only minor differences in training load, travel and competition schedule or training environment.
Cross-country skiers report the highest frequency of symptoms during the winter months, similar to elite swimmers11 and mirroring seasonal patterns for RTIs8 and norovirus infections22 in the general population. However, when adjusting for other variables, such as the number of competitions, spring was associated with the highest risk of symptoms. However, since these athletes typically train and compete on snow until mid-April, the months categorised as ‘spring’ bear much resemblance to winter. Furthermore, it is during these months that vitamin D levels would be expected to be at their lowest, with recent research indicating that vitamin D deficiency is a predictor of infection in endurance athletes.23 Since training phase was not a significant risk factor when adjusted for season, and since patterns of infection appear to be similar for summer and winter sport athletes, time of year appears to influence infection risk to a greater degree than the training phase the athlete is in.
Training-related and competition-related risk factors
The single biggest risk factor for infection was international air travel, making the athlete approximately five times more likely to report symptoms the subsequent day. This is in agreement with previous studies in non-athletes which have reported that approximately 20% of individuals experience symptoms of respiratory infection within 1 week of commercial aircraft travel24 and that cabin staff are more predisposed to respiratory infections than the general population.25 Schwellnus et al26 found that athletes travelling to a foreign destination more than five time-zone difference from their home country had a twofold to threefold increase in risk of illness. However, in contrast to the current study, homeward travel was not associated with an increased risk of symptoms. The majority of homebound flights included in the present analyses were following competition weekends, with athletes typically flying home the same day and often within a few hours of finishing the final competition. As such, it is possible to speculate that infection risk was further exacerbated because athletes were travelling home in an already somewhat immunocompromised state, since it is well documented that acute bouts of strenuous and prolonged physical activity result in immune disturbances that persist for a number of hours.27 Air travel is associated with a variety of stressors that may increase infection risk. These include time-zone changes, sleep disruption, increased pathogen exposure owing to crowded conditions in airports and on aircraft, mild hypoxia and drying of oral and nasal mucosa, as well as stressful events such as delays and lost luggage. Hence, although often unavoidable, athletes are advised to minimise air travel as much as possible, particularly immediately prior to important competitions and major championships. When competing in central Europe, driving between competition venues may be a preferable alternative to flying, provided the distance is feasible. Where this is not possible, flying out as early as possible prior to a major competition will reduce the likelihood of the athlete experiencing infection during the event itself, although this of course does not ameliorate the risk of an infection disrupting the training/tapering process. Following competitions abroad, delaying homeward travel until the subsequent day may be preferable to flying home on the same day.
In contrast to the findings of Foster,18 neither TRIMP nor training stress was associated with increased incidence of self-reported infection at the between-person or within-person level, when accounting for other risk factors. Although within-person changes in training monotony were not significantly associated with symptom onset, athletes with higher average training monotony reported somewhat fewer symptomatic episodes than those with lower training monotony. This finding suggests that a microcycle that avoids large fluctuations in total daily training load may be preferable to one that alternates between very hard and very easy days, at least in terms of reducing infection risk. This is an interesting finding and contrasts with current recommendations that athletes should add variety to limit training monotony.27 However, rather than measuring only daily variation in TRIMP, a calculation that also accounts for differences in activity type (eg, skiing vs running) would give a more accurate indication of the true training monotony.
None of the other measured training variables were significantly associated with symptom onset or duration when accounting for other independent variables. This is in contrast to Hellard et al11 who found that increases in high-load and resistance training augmented the risk of respiratory infection. In the current study, high-intensity endurance exercise was significantly associated with symptom onset only in the unadjusted models. This can likely be explained by the fact that high-intensity endurance exercise was a sum of all recorded time spent in intensity zones 3–5, including interval training and competition. However, since competitions are associated with additional physiological and psychological stress above that typically encountered even during the most intense training sessions, competition was also treated as a separate binary variable (Did the athlete compete? Yes/No). Since only competition remained significant in the adjusted model, it appears that some other factor than merely time spent at high-intensity contributes to the increase in infection susceptibility associated with competing. Whether this is related to greater psychological stress, greater physiological stress, environmental factors such as crowd exposure, or a combination of these, is not clear. Whatever the underlying mechanisms, the finding that taking part in competitions increases the risk of infection is in agreement with previous studies,28 although Hellard et al11 found that the risk of upper respiratory tract and pulmonary infections in swimmers was higher in the periods of intensive training than in competition and postcompetition periods. Unlike swimmers, however, cross-country skiers perform their most intensive training during the summer and primarily compete during the winter months6 which may account for this discrepancy.
It is well known that ascent to high altitude alters physiological and metabolic function and can influence immune function.13 However, it is not clear whether the moderate altitudes to which elite endurance athletes are typically exposed result in clinical changes in immunity and infection susceptibility. Tiollier et al29 found no significant differences in mucosal immunity between elite cross-country skiers sleeping at 2500–3500 masl and training at 1200 masl for 18 days, compared with a control group who lived and trained at 1200 masl. In accordance with this, the current results suggest that training at moderate altitude does not significantly increase the risk of an athlete experiencing symptoms of respiratory or gastrointestinal infection when other factors, such as air travel to and from the altitude camp, are accounted for.
Performance level, sex, age and family situation
In the current study, the athletes of the highest performance level experienced fewer total days of symptoms compared with athletes of a lower performance level. Although it is not possible to determine cause and effect, this is in accordance with the findings of Hellard et al11 that swimmers of a higher performance level had a lower risk of upper RTIs, suggesting that a robust immune system capable of withstanding and recovering quickly from infection, even during periods of high physiological, psychological and environmental stress, may be a predictor of success in an otherwise homogenous group of elite athletes.
Although, in the general population, men appear to be somewhat more susceptible to viral and bacterial infections than women,30 recent studies of athletes suggest a higher incidence of respiratory infections among females than males.31–34 However, in the current study, sex was not significantly associated with either symptom incidence or duration, nor was age a significant predictor of symptom incidence. Although previous studies have found that age influences the incidence rates of acute GII21 and RTIs,8 the age range in the current study was comparatively narrow (18–34 years). Furthermore, since there were no significant differences between the recruit and senior team, the number of years of athletic training, within the range studied, does not appear to influence the frequency of acute gastrointestinal and respiratory tract symptoms in this population.
There was no significant association between living in a household with young children and the incidence of symptoms indicative of upper respiratory or gastrointestinal infection. It should be noted, however, that only three of the athletes included in the study had children, and further research is therefore necessary to corroborate this.
Limitations
The current study design is associated with a number of limitations which should be acknowledged. Although the strength of the study is that it includes a very large amount of data for some of the world's best winter endurance athletes, a clear limitation is that training and infection data were self-reported. Although elite cross-country skiers have previously been found to self-report their training accurately,35 only 79% of 159 respiratory illnesses reported by athletes during the Sochi Olympic Games were due to infection.34 Since not all symptoms in the current study were verified by a physician, it is likely that some of the events included in analyses were due to non-infectious causes. It is also possible that elite athletes are more/less apt to self-report illness than the general population. However, since the analyses are based only on comparisons within and between individuals from the same athlete group, a reporting bias is unlikely to be of major concern. It should also be noted that the current study does not include data on whether athletes suffered from asthma or allergies. This may have influenced the results, particularly since some symptoms of asthmatic and allergic reactions bear resemblance to those associated with upper RTI. Furthermore, Corne et al36 found that individuals with asthma did not differ significantly in frequency, severity or duration of upper RTIs or symptoms associated with rhinovirus infection but experienced more frequent lower RTIs, with more severe and long-lasting symptoms. Other factors not included in the current analyses may also have influenced symptom incidence—for example, the presence of eating disorders, any habitual medication use or the presence of injuries. Munford and Pugin37 found that the normal responses to injury can inhibit systemic inflammation and be immunosuppressive. As such, it is possible to speculate that athletes might be somewhat more susceptible to RTI and/or GII during periods of injury.
Conclusion
World-class cross-country skiers report three to four RTI and GIIs per year, with symptoms typically lasting 5 days. The highest incidence of such symptoms for these athletes occurs during the winter months. However, WL athletes experience fewer symptomatic days per year compared with athletes of a lower performance level. Air travel and taking part in competitions significantly increase the risk of symptoms. Since both are inherent components of elite sport, future research exploring effective strategies to minimise infection risk associated with competition and air travel is warranted. In terms of reducing infection susceptibility, a microcycle that avoids large fluctuations in total daily training load may be preferable.
What are the findings
Elite cross-country skiers typically report three to four respiratory tract and gastrointestinal infections per year, with the highest incidence occurring during the winter months. This is similar to annual patterns of infection reported for summer sport athletes.
Air travel and competition markedly increase the risk of symptoms.
Large day-to-day fluctuations in training load are associated with a small but significant increase in the frequency of symptoms.
World/Olympic medal-winning athletes report fewer symptomatic days/year than less successful athletes, but even within a homogenous athlete group, there is large interindividual variability in the frequency and duration of symptoms. Approximately 16% of athletes report ≥6 respiratory tract and gastrointestinal infections per year and can be categorised as ‘illness prone’.
How might it impact on clinical practice in the future?
Athletes, coaches and support staff should be aware of the times when athletes are particularly prone to infection (winter months and periods of competition and travel). Implementing effective hygiene procedures, promoting adequate recovery and optimising the nutritional status of athletes should be a particular priority at these times.
Athletes should avoid unnecessary air travel and excessive competition in the lead up to important events. It may be advantageous to delay homeward travel until the athlete is rested, rather than flying home immediately following competition.
Athletes are advised to avoid extreme day-to-day fluctuations in training load.
References
Footnotes
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Contributors ISS was involved in the study's design; data collection, analysis and interpretation; drafting and revising the manuscript; and approving the final version. IMT was involved in the data analysis and interpretation, critically revising the manuscript and approving the final version. ET developed the idea, critically revised the manuscript and approved the final version. RB was involved in the study's design, critically revising the manuscript and approving the final version. MG was involved in the study's design, interpreting and critically revising the manuscript and approving the final version.
Competing interests None declared.
Ethics approval Loughborough University Ethical Review Committee.
Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.