Overtraining
It is no secret among athletes that in order
to improve performance you've got to work
hard. However, hard training breaks you down
and makes you weaker. It is rest that makes
you stronger. Physiologic improvement in
sports only occurs during the rest period
following hard training. This adaptation is
in response to maximal loading of the
cardiovascular and muscular systems and is
accomplished by improving efficiency of the
heart, increasing capillaries in the muscles,
and increasing glycogen stores and
mitochondrial enzyme systems within the
muscle cells. During recovery periods these
systems build to greater levels to
compensate for the stress that you have
applied. The result is that you are now at a
higher level of performance.
If sufficient rest is not included in a
training program then regeneration cannot
occur and performance plateaus. If this
imbalance between excess training and
inadequate rest persists then performance
will decline. Overtraining can best be
defined as the state where the athlete has
been repeatedly stressed by training to the
point where rest is no longer adequate to
allow for recovery. The "overtraining
syndrome" is the name given to the
collection of emotional, behavioral, and
physical symptoms due to overtraining that
has persisted for weeks to months. Athletes
and coaches also know it as "burnout" or "staleness."
This is different from the day to day
variation in performance and post exercise
tiredness that is common in conditioned
athletes. Overtraining is marked by
cumulative exhaustion that persists even
after recovery periods.
The most common symptom is fatigue. This may
limit workouts and may be present at rest.
The athlete may also become moody, easily
irritated, have altered sleep patterns,
become depressed, or lose the competitive
desire and enthusiasm for the sport. Some
will report decreased appetite and weight
loss. Physical symptoms include persistent
muscular soreness, increased frequency of
viral illnesses, and increased incidence of
injuries.
There have been several clinical studies
done on athletes with the overtraining
syndrome. Exercise physiologic,
psychological, and biochemical laboratory
testing have been done. Findings in these
studies have shown decreased performance in
exercise testing, decreased mood state, and,
in some, increased cortisol levels -- the
body's "stress" hormone. A decrease in
testosterone, altered immune status, and an
increase in muscular break down products
have also been identified. Medically, the
overtraining syndrome is classified as a
neuro-endocrine disorder. The normal fine
balance in the interaction between the
autonomic nervous system and the hormonal
system is disturbed and athletic "jet lag"
results. The body now has a decreased
ability to repair itself during rest.
Heaping more workouts onto this unbalanced
system only worsens the situation.
Additional stress in the form of
difficulties at work or personal life also
contributes.
It appears that there are two forms of the
syndrome. The sympathetic form is more
common in sprint type sports and the
parasympathetic form is more common in
endurance sports. The results from various
measurements taken during exercise
physiologic testing differ between the two
forms, but decreased overall performance and
increased perceived fatigue are similar. In
the parasympathetic form there may be a
lower heart rate for a given workload.
Athletes training with a heart rate monitor
may notice that they cannot sustain the
workout at their usual "set point." Fatigue
takes over and prematurely terminates the
workout. Regulation of glucose can become
altered and the athlete may experience
symptoms of hypoglycemia during exercise.
I won't comment on all of the differences
between the two forms, but one example is
resting heart rate. In the sympathetic form,
the resting heart rate is elevated. In the
parasympathetic form, however, the resting
heart rate is decreased. If this sounds
confusing, then you are not alone. There is
very little agreement in the literature
about abnormal laboratory findings.
Additionally, it is possible to have the
overtraining syndrome, but have completely
normal physical findings and biochemical
tests. At this point, there is no single
test that will confirm the presence of
overtraining. The overtraining syndrome
should be considered in any athlete who
manifests symptoms of prolonged fatigue and
performance that has leveled off or
decreased. It is important to exclude any
underlying illness that may be responsible
for the fatigue.
The treatment for the overtraining syndrome
is rest. The longer the overtraining has
occurred, the more rest required. Therefore,
early detection is very important. If the
overtraining has only occurred for a short
period of time (e.g., 3 - 4 weeks) then
interrupting training for 3 - 5 days is
usually sufficient rest. After this,
workouts can be resumed on an alternate day
basis. The intensity of the training can be
maintained but the total volume must be
lower. It is important that the factors that
lead to overtraining be identified and
corrected. Otherwise, the overtraining
syndrome is likely to recur. The alternate
day recovery period is continued for a few
weeks and then an increase in volume is
permitted. In more severe cases, the
training program may have to be interrupted
for weeks, and it may take months to
recover. An alternate form of exercise can
be substituted to help prevent the exercise
withdrawal syndrome.
All of the medical studies and advice on
overtraining have involved single sport
athletes. For triathletes and other
multi-sport athletes the recovery process
may be different depending on the
circumstances. If it can be identified that
the overtraining has occurred in only one
discipline, then resting that discipline
along with significant decreases in the
other sports can bring about full recovery.
It is vitally important not to suddenly
substitute more workouts in one sport in an
attempt to compensate for rest in another.
The athlete that does this will not heal the
overtraining, but will drive him or herself
deeper into a hole. Overtraining affects
both peripheral and central mechanisms in
the body. Resting from overtraining on the
bicycle by swimming more will help a pair of
fatigued quadriceps, but to the heart,
pituitary, and adrenals, stress is stress.
As with almost everything else health
related, prevention is the key. Well-balanced
gradual increases in training are
recommended. A training schedule design
called periodisation varies the training
load in cycles with built in mandatory rest
phases. During the high workload phase, the
athlete alternates between high intensity
interval work and low intensity endurance
work . This approach is used by a number of
elite athletes in many sports.
A training log is the best method to monitor
progress. In addition to keeping track of
distance and intensity, the athlete can
record the resting morning heart rate,
weight, general health, how the workout felt,
and levels of muscular soreness and fatigue.
The latter two can be scored on a 10 point
scale. Significant, progressive changes in
any of these parameters may signal
overtraining. Avoiding monotonous training
and maintaining adequate nutrition are other
recommendations for prevention. Vigorous
exercise during the incubation period of a
viral illness may increase the duration and
severity of that illness. Athletes who feel
as if they are developing a cold should rest
or reduce the training schedule for a few
days.
In conclusion, the prevailing wisdom is that
it is better to be undertrained than
overtrained. Rest is a vital part of any
athlete's training. There is considerable
evidence that reduced training (same
intensity, lower volume) for up to 21 days
will not decrease performance. A
well-planned training program involves as
much art as science and should allow for
flexibility. Early warning signs of
overtraining should be heeded and schedule
adjustments made accordingly. Smart training
is the path to faster times and good health. |
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