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Heart Rate Responses in Show‐Jumpers Over A Three‐Day Training Session
Author(s) -
Harris P,
Roberts C,
Armstrong S,
Murray R,
Handel I
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
equine veterinary journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.82
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 2042-3306
pISSN - 0425-1644
DOI - 10.1111/evj.12267_53
Subject(s) - medicine , heart rate , jumping , blood lactate , breed , zoology , physical therapy , rowing , blood pressure , physiology , biology , history , archaeology
The objective of this study was to provide more information regarding the relationship between heart rate ( HR ) and performance in show‐jumpers. Methods Ten mixed breed horses (9.1 ± 1.9 yrs) were assessed at a British Equestrian Federation ( BEF ) World Class Performance three‐day training session. Riders received coaching during warm‐up ( WU ) and after jumping a 15 fence (1.35–1.45 m) course once on day‐1, twice on days 2 & 3; on day‐3 the second round was an 8‐fence jump‐off. C linical assessments were performed, and plasma lactate concentrations determined, pre‐ and post‐exercise. Take‐off distance ( TDF ) was determined using high‐speed motion capture. The coach graded horse jumping technique (validated methodology). HR was recorded telemetrically from WU until 10 mins post‐exercise. Variables were compared using regression procedures/Spearman correlation and paired Students t‐test (P<0.05). Results HR was not significantly different between days or consecutive jumping rounds. Mean HR was lower in WU than during the course (127 ± 11 vs 136 ± 16: P = 0.027), likely related to increased speed during the course, although HRpeak tended to be higher during WU day‐ 1 possibly reflecting excitement. Mean HR increased for each quarter during the course. Higher mean course and third‐quarter HR were associated with higher blood lactate concentrations (P = 0.047), greater gluteal and longissimus dorsi muscle spasm on palpation (P<0.01), more faults (P = 0.044) and lower technique scores (P = 0.019). TDF was negatively correlated with mean course and third‐quarter HR , indicating that closer take‐off may be harder work (P<0.01). Conclusions HR increases throughout a jumping course. Higher HRs may be associated with jumping inefficiency and muscle spasm, with potential performance implications for multi‐day competitions. Ethical Animal Research E xplicit owner informed consent for participation in this study is not stated. Sources of funding:  The World Class Development Programme is funded by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, through Exchequer and National Lottery funds, via UK Sport. Competing interests:  none.

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