Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://open.uns.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1682
Title: Explosive muscle power assessment in elite athletes using wingate anaerobic test
Authors: Dea Karaba Jakovljević 
Mirela Erić 
Gordana Jovanović 
Goran Dimitrić 
Maja Buljčik Čupić 
Ponorac, Nenad
Keywords: Sports performance;Muscle strength;Muscle contraction;Exercise test;Sports medicine
Issue Date: 2018
Journal: Revista Brasileira de Medicina do Esporte
Abstract: Introduction: Maximal effort physiological tests provide information about the current functional capacity of athletes. Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate anaerobic performance parameters in elite athletes and to compare them in terms of the specific demands of each sport. We also created and applied the new software which enables us to quantify a new parameter -explosive muscle power (EP), a major component in sports requiring explosive bursts of movement lasting from a few seconds to 1 or 2 minutes. This new parameter reflects the velocity of energy transformation from intramuscular ATP and high-energy phosphates into mechanical power. Methods: All Wingate test parameters (standard parameters) – anaerobic power (AP), anaerobic capacity (AC), and explosive power (EP) as the new parameter were recorded in 104 subjects: 30 non-athletes and 74 athletes divided into different groups depending on their sport specialty (20 rowers, 28 wrestlers and 26 soccer players). Results: Anaerobic power (AP), anaerobic capacity (AC) and explosive power (EP) were significantly higher in the group of athletes compared to non-athletes. Among athletes, significant differences were observed in some parameters according to the type of activities they are involved in. The highest values were recorded in the group of wrestlers (AP=836W; AC=16.6kJ; EP=139W/s). The values of AP (absolute values) and EP (absolute and relative values) were significantly higher in wrestlers than in soccer players and rowers, but there was no significant difference in AC among these groups. The EP variable had a distribution similar to AP. Conclusions: Alongside anaerobic power and anaerobic capacity, the assessment of explosive power may complement the anaerobic profile of athletes. Experts in the field of sports medicine and exercise physiology could find these results useful in improving test variables, which are more important for specific sports, and for evaluating and monitoring training progress. Level of Evidence I; Diagnostic studies - Investigating a diagnostic test.
URI: https://open.uns.ac.rs/handle/123456789/1682
ISSN: 1517-8692
DOI: 10.1590/1517-869220182402183151
Appears in Collections:FSFV Publikacije/Publications

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