Abstract
The main aim of the present study was to determine the short-and ultra-short-term heart rate variability (HRV) during different physical and physiological tests and to compare HRV to different performance levels. The latter aim was to compare participants’ short-and ultra-short-term heart rate variability before-, during-, and post-tests. Our hypothesis was that there would be a significant difference between test performance and HRV parameters, and the high performing group would have significantly higher HRV parameters than the low performing group. Fifty-three healthy men (Mage=26.9±4 years, Mheight =177.9±5.7 cm; Mweight =77.8±8.7 kg) were recruited in the current study. We completed the data collection procedure for each participant in four consecutive days. On day-1, anthropometric measurements were conducted and then participants performed isokinetic tests. On day-2, participants performed anaerobic tests; on day-3 equilibrium tests, and on day-4 aerobic capacity tests. The HRV records of all participants were obtained before, during and after all these tests. Based on the participants’ performance, they were classified into two groups: participants in G1 had lower performance and those in G2 higher performance. A two-way repeated measures ANOVA yielded significant differences in HRV values obtained in the four different tests. There was a significant difference between fitness test performance groups in the variation of short-and ultra-short-term HRV parameters.
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Alparslan, T., Arabaci, R., & Gorgulu, R. (2021). Non-invasive assessment of short and ultra-short heart rate variability during different physical and physiological tests. Kinesiology, 53(1), 122–130. https://doi.org/10.26582/k.53.1.15
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