Psychological changes in athletes infected with Omicron after return to training: fatigue, sleep, and mood.

Chenhao Tan, Jinhao Wang, Guohuan Cao, Yelei He, Jun Yin, Yudan Chu, Zhizhong Geng, Longji Li, Jun Qiu
Author Information
  1. Chenhao Tan: Shanghai Research Institute of Sports Science (Shanghai Anti-Doping Agency), Shanghai, China.
  2. Jinhao Wang: Shanghai Research Institute of Sports Science (Shanghai Anti-Doping Agency), Shanghai, China.
  3. Guohuan Cao: Shanghai Research Institute of Sports Science (Shanghai Anti-Doping Agency), Shanghai, China.
  4. Yelei He: Shanghai Research Institute of Sports Science (Shanghai Anti-Doping Agency), Shanghai, China.
  5. Jun Yin: Shanghai Research Institute of Sports Science (Shanghai Anti-Doping Agency), Shanghai, China.
  6. Yudan Chu: Shanghai Research Institute of Sports Science (Shanghai Anti-Doping Agency), Shanghai, China.
  7. Zhizhong Geng: Shanghai University of Sport, Shanghai, China.
  8. Longji Li: Shanghai University of Sport, Shanghai, China.
  9. Jun Qiu: Shanghai Research Institute of Sports Science (Shanghai Anti-Doping Agency), Shanghai, China.

Abstract

Background: This study aims to analyze the changes of approximately 1 month in fatigue, sleep, and mood in athletes after returning to training following infection with the COVID-19 Omicron strain and provide recommendations for returning to training after infection.
Methods: Two hundred and thirty professional athletes who had returned to training after being infected with COVID-19 in December 2022 were recruited to participate in three tests conducted from early January 2023. The second test was completed approximately 1 week after the first, and the third was completed about 2 weeks after the second. Each test consisted of completing scales and the exercise-induced fatigue measure. The scales included a visual analog scale, the Athens Insomnia Scale for non-clinical application, and the Depression-Anxiety-Stress scale. The exercise task was a six-minute stair climb test, and athletes evaluated subjective fatigue levels before and after exercise using another Visual Analog Scale and the Karolinska Sleepiness Scale.
Results: After returning to training, athletes' physical fatigue decreased initially but increased as training progressed. Cognitive fatigue did not change significantly. The exercise task led to elevated levels of physical fatigue after a longer duration of training. Sleep quality problems decreased rapidly after the start of training but remained stable with prolonged training. Depression levels continued to decline, while anxiety levels only reduced after a longer duration of training. Stress levels decreased rapidly after the start of training but did not change with prolonged training.
Conclusion: Athletes who return to training after recovering from COVID-19 experience positive effects on their fatigue, sleep, and mood. It is important to prioritize anxiety assessment and interventions during the short period after returning and to continue monitoring fatigue levels and implementing recovery interventions over a longer period of time.

Keywords

References

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MeSH Term

Humans
Affect
Athletes
COVID-19
Exercise
Sleep
Male
Female
Adolescent
Young Adult
Adult
SARS-CoV-2
Surveys and Questionnaires
Time Factors
Diagnostic Self Evaluation

Word Cloud

Created with Highcharts 10.0.0trainingfatiguelevelsathletesreturningCOVID-19sleepmoodOmicrontestScaleexercisedecreasedlongerchangesapproximately1infectionstraininfectedsecondcompletedscalesscaletaskphysicalchangedurationSleeprapidlystartprolongedanxietyreturninterventionsperiodBackground:studyaimsanalyzemonthfollowingproviderecommendationsMethods:TwohundredthirtyprofessionalreturnedDecember2022recruitedparticipatethreetestsconductedearlyJanuary2023weekfirstthird2weeksconsistedcompletingexercise-inducedmeasureincludedvisualanalogAthensInsomnianon-clinicalapplicationDepression-Anxiety-Stresssix-minutestairclimbevaluatedsubjectiveusinganotherVisualAnalogKarolinskaSleepinessResults:athletes'initiallyincreasedprogressedCognitivesignificantlyledelevatedqualityproblemsremainedstableDepressioncontinueddeclinereducedStressConclusion:AthletesrecoveringexperiencepositiveeffectsimportantprioritizeassessmentshortcontinuemonitoringimplementingrecoverytimePsychologicaltraining:FatigueMoodReturn

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