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Pressure and coverage effects of sporting compression garments on cardiovascular function,thermoregulatory function,and exercise performance
Authors:Email author" target="_blank">Braid?A?MacRaeEmail author  Raechel?M?Laing  Brian?E?Niven  James?D?Cotter
Institution:(1) Clothing and Textile Sciences, Department of Applied Sciences, University of Otago, PO Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand;(2) School of Physical Education, University of Otago, PO Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand;(3) Centre for Application of Statistics and Mathematics, University of Otago, PO Box 56, Dunedin, New Zealand
Abstract:Sporting compression garments (CG) are used widely during exercise despite little evidence of benefits. The purpose of this study was to investigate coverage and pressure effects of full-body CG on cardiovascular and thermoregulatory function at rest and during prolonged exercise, and on exercise performance. Twelve recreationally trained male cyclists mean (SD) age, 26 (7) years; (V)\dot]\textO2max \dot{V}{\text{O}}_{2\max } , 53 (8) mL kg−1 min−1] completed three sessions (counterbalanced order), wearing either correctly-sized CG (CSG; 11–15 mmHg), over-sized CG (OSG; 8–13 mmHg), or gym shorts (CONT). Test sessions were conducted in temperate conditions 24 (1)°C, 60 (4)% relative humidity; ~2 m s−1 air velocity during exercise], consisting of resting on a chair then on a cycle ergometer, before 60-min fixed-load cycling at ~65% (V)\dot]\textO2max \dot{V}{\text{O}}_{2\max } and a 6-km time trial. Wearing CG (CSG or OSG) did not mitigate cardiovascular strain during mild orthostatic stress at rest (p = 0.20–0.93 for garment effects). During exercise, cardiac output was ~5% higher in the CG conditions (p < 0.05), which appears to be accounted for via non-significant higher end-exercise heart rate (~4–7%, p = 0.30; p = 0.06 for greater heart rate drift in CSG); other cardiovascular variables, including stroke volume, were similar among conditions (p = 0.23–0.91). Covered-skin temperature was higher in CG conditions (p < 0.001) but core (oesophageal) temperature was not (p = 0.79). Time-trial performance (mean power, time taken) was similar with or without CG (p = 0.24–0.44). In conclusion, any demonstrable physiological or psychophysical effects of full-body CG were mild and seemingly reflective more of surface coverage than pressure. No benefit was evident for exercise performance.
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