New Aspects to Overtraining - Unexplained Underperformance ... · New Aspects to Overtraining - Unexplained Underperformance Syndrome Jürgen Steinacker with: Steiner R, Weichenberger

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New Aspects to Overtraining -Unexplained Underperformance SyndromeJürgen Steinackerwith: Steiner R, Weichenberger M, Hamma T, Müller-Witt A, Treff G, Wolff J, Machus K, Dehnert Ch, Liu Y

Section of Sports- and Rehabilitation Medicine Dept. of Medicine IIUniversity of UlmUlm; Germany

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

The case

32 years old athleteSeptember 2009 pain in the right jaw and

cephalgia, multiple examinations by practitioner and specialist without findings, tooth 1/7 revised.

During the months before no bites of insects or other severe infection despite in july heavy cold.

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Complaints

Training load was reduced gradually more and more

Fatigue after training increased, performance and maximal force decreased

Regeneration was not possibleComplaints increasedAt a given work load puls rate increased

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Training and First diagnosisTraining for 22 years15 units and 20 hours per weekreduction down to 3 units and 4 hours per week

Working diagnosisOvertraining

or UPS:Unexplained underperformance syndrome

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Why speak about overtraining?My athletes need more training!

Overload and fatigue are part of training

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

UPS: Unexplained underperformance syndromeA prolonged decrease in performance or

trainability and increased fatigue for more than several weeks to months in an athlete -

which can not be attributed to another defined pathology and when the previous training was more than 5-7 times or more than 10 hrs per week.

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Fatigue is part of physical training

Peripheral fatigue (local fatigue)• Muscular fatigue• Limited by organ capacities• May be compensated by effort • Typical for normal training processes

Central fatigue• Mood disturbances • Hypothalamic dysfunction• Mental-psychological overload

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Training, overreaching and overtraining

Overtraining

Overreaching

Training

3 phases modelacc. to Lehmann et al.1997

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Time domain: functional overreaching and the overtraining syndrome

PROCESS TRAINING(overload)

INTENSIFIED TRAINING

OUTCOME ACUTE FATIGUE

FUNCTIONAL OR

(short-term OR)

NON-FUNCTIONAL OVERREACHING

(extreme OR)

OVERTRAINING SYNDROME (OTS)

RECOVERY Day(s) Days – weeks Weeks – months Months - …

PERFORMANCE INCREASE Temporary performance decrement (e.g. training camp)

STAGNATION DECREASE

DECREASE

ECSS Position Statement ’Task Force’, Meeusen R, Steinacker JM et al. Europ J Sport Science 2006; 6: 1-14

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Fiber type transformation during training occured only during the rest periods

Baseline 3 4 weeks25

30

35

40

45

50

55

60

65

70

75MHC IMHC IIa

*

RT R1 ET R2

MH

C [%

]

7 8

Liu Y, W Lormes, C Baur, JM Steinacker (2003) Effects of high resistance and low intense endurance training onmyosin heavy chain isoform expression in highly trained rowers. Int J Sports Med 24: 264-270.

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Semistarvation alters protein synthesis rate

Svanberg E et al. Eur.J.Clin.Invest. 30: 722-728, 2000

Pro

tein

synt

hesi

s ra

te

ExerciseTraining

Time

+- -

+

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Basal Cortisol increases during phases of intensive training

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Leptin and insulin resistance in overreachingModified after: Simsch et al. Int J Sports Med 23: 422-427 (2002)

0 1 2 3 4training phase

-30

-20

-10

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

80

R1baseline RT ET R2

chan

ges

in g

luco

se/in

sulin

ratio

[%]

-60

-50

-40

-30

-20

-10

0

10

20

Cha

nge

in L

eptin

con

cent

ratio

n [%

]

Leptin

Insulin resistance(glucose/insulin ratio)

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Thyroid axis responds to training load

1.2

1.4

1.6

1.8

2

2.2 TSH

*

*

* *

Simsch et al. Int J Sports Med 23: 422-427 (2002)

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Immune reaction is lower during training

Bruunsgard et al.(1997) Med Sci Sports Exerc 29: 1176

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

J-Curved relationship between infect rate and training load

Trainingsbelastung

Infe

ktra

tePedersen et al. (2001) Exerc Immunol Rev 7: 18

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Hyperinflammation?

• Damage is caused by training• Stress and damage causes

Hyperinflammation• Hyper inflammatory Damage Associated

Molecular Patterns are activated (DAMP)• Damage is caused by pathogens

• Pathogens may cause activation of Pathogen Associated Molecular Patterns (PAMP)

• Hyperinflammation causes metabolic stress and reduced immune function

Delgado & Deretic Cell Death Differ. 2009 16: 976–983

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Stress and recovery balance

Training loadCompetitionNontraining Stressors

Recovery

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Stress / recovery balance

Injury / Burnout

Regeneration

Stress

SelfregulationPersonal accomplishment

Kellmann et al. (2001). Sport Psychologist 15: 151

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

UPS / overtraining and burnout

Different pathogenesis of UPS and burnoutUPS:

Training > 10 hrs / weekBurnout:

Appraisal of demands Appraisal of ability to deal with demands Attempts to cope Exhaustion

Non-functional overreaching and overtraining have mood disturbances

Exhaustion, lethargy and negative moodUPS may have common symptoms of burnout Treatment is similar

Cresswell & Eklund, in press-a; Maslach 1982; Raedeke, 1997; Schutte, Toppinen, Kalimo & Schaufeli, 2000

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Diagnostic workup:make it explainable• History including training history• Physical examination• Exercise test: maximal performance• Laboratory: exclusion of significant other

illnesses• No specific lab value for UPS / OTR established• TSH, Leptin, HOMA• Zytokine patterns?

• Psychological questionnaires• RESTQ-Sport• POMS, HADS

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Therapeutic measures: Medicine

• Information and therapeutic visits / talks• Use of daily log book

• Treatment • Infections• Injuries• Allergies / Asthma

• General measures: • Inhalation, physical therapy

• Psychological intervention• Training of relaxation techniques

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Therapeutic measures: Sport

• Stop training for certain time• Days, weeks

• Start exercise trials• duration first <30 min, later <60 min• Heart rate < 40 % HRmax or < 120/min • Variable training programme, no Monotony• Short intensities (2-3 min) and strength training

often better tolerated (depends on sport)• Games help to reintroduce pleasure• Recovery to training gradually

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Therapeutic measures: psychosocial and environment• Sleep• Social activities outside of sport

• Friends, theatre, dancing, swimming, sauna, …• Change of environment

• Days off, vacation• Partner and family related problems should

be solved• Problems in profession should be solved

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Therapeutic measures: nutrition and environment• Carbohydrate rich nutrition• Fluid intake • Intake of vegetables and fruits

• Avoid training in unsafe or stressful conditions

• Avoid exhaustion• Very cold weather, wind, rain, …

Sport- und RehabilitationsmedizinUniversitätsklinikum Ulm

JM Steinacker

Thanks to / Cooperations

Yuefei Liu Dieter Altenburg, Klaus GüntherKatja Nething German Rowing FederationOlga Prokopchuk Bernhard O. Böhm, Peter JehleMoamer Brkic Med. Klinik, University of UlmAnnette Hildebrand Michael KellmannLarissa Gampert Sports Psychology, University BochumAndrea Kresz Liangli Wang Werner Lormes Dmytro ProkopchukAxel NeckerMarkus Heinichen

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