Login / Signup

Performing more than 20 purposeful gameplay headers in a soccer season may alter autonomic function in female youth soccer players.

Marquise M BonnAlexandra B HarrissJames W G ThompsonJames P Dickey
Published in: Research in sports medicine (Print) (2021)
This study evaluated the effects of cumulative purposeful soccer heading on autonomic nervous system function in 22 female youth soccer players (13.3 ± 0.9 years). A 10 minute electrocardiogram recording was collected at baseline and following the 20 game season (post-season) to calculate measures of heart rate variability (HRV), including standard deviation of the normal-normal intervals, total power, high frequency (HF), low frequency (LF), LF:HF, normalized HF and normalized LF. Participants were categorized into low- (<20 headers per season; n = 13) and high- (>20 headers per season; n = 9) exposure groups. Mann-Whitney U tests demonstrated no significant differences between groups for any HRV metric. However, the increased normalized LF power (low exposure 8.67 and high exposure -31.17, respectively; r = 0.35) and LF:HF power (-6.39 and 15.80, respectively; r = 0.35), between groups had moderate practical significance. Therefore, female youth players who perform more than 20 purposeful headers during a soccer season may exhibit altered autonomic function.
Keyphrases
  • heart rate variability
  • heart rate
  • high frequency
  • mental health
  • physical activity
  • young adults
  • transcranial magnetic stimulation
  • acute heart failure
  • heart failure
  • high intensity
  • atrial fibrillation