Effect of post-activation potentiation induced by one, two or three half-squats on repeated sprint acceleration performance
Date
2018Author
Rouissi, MehdiTurki, Olfa
Bragazzi, Nicola
Owen, Adam
Haddad, Monoem
Chamari, Karim
Chtara, Moktar
...show more authors ...show less authors
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Introduction: The aim of this study was to analyze the effect of different post-activation potentiation (PAP) protocols on initial-acceleration (0-10 m) and late-acceleration phases (10 to 30 m) within a repeated sprint ability (RSA) test. Methods: Twenty athletes (age: 20.8±1.2 years, height: 180.2±5.3 cm, body mass: 76.8±6.4 kg, % body fat: 10.9±2.8, and 3 repetition maximum [3-RM] of half-squats 152.9±14.8 kg) completed 4 testing sessions of RSA testing (7x30-m sprints, starting every 25s, with an active recovery inbetween). Five minutes before the RSA-testing, conditioning protocols were performed: I) one halfsquats at 90% of 1 repetition maximum (1RM) [PAP1]; II) two half-squats at 90% of 1RM [PAP2]; III) three half-squats at 90% of 1RM [PAP3], and (IV) the control protocol [CON]: no effort. Each conditioning condition was applied in a counterbalanced, randomized order on separate days separated by a minimum of 72 hours’ rest. Results: ANOVA showed that PAP1 and PAP2 sessions were similar, and brought significantly improved results for: 0-30m and 0-10m sprints of the RSA-time (p[removed]0.05, ES=small). Furthermore, magnitude-based inference revealed that both PAP1 and PAP2 protocols elicited changes >75% likelihood of exceeding the smallest worthwhile change (>99% likely) for mean sprint-time (RSAmean) and the percentage of sprint-decrement (RSAdec) in overall 0-30 m and 0-10 m of the RSA test. Conclusion: PAP1 and PAP2 exert a positive effect on the initial-acceleration phase of the RSA and could be considered in the preparation routine of repeated sprinting activities. © 2018, CIC Edizioni Internazionali s.r.l. All rights reserved.
Collections
- Sport Sciences (pre 2023) [205 items ]