Impact of military training stress on hormone response and recovery

Military personnel are required to train and operate in challenging multi-stressor environments, which can affect hormonal levels, and subsequently compromise performance and recovery. The aims of this project were to 1) assess the impact of an eight-day military training exercise on salivary cortis...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2022-03, Vol.17 (3), p.e0265121-e0265121
Hauptverfasser: Tait, Jamie L, Drain, Jace R, Corrigan, Sean L, Drake, Jeremy M, Main, Luana C
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Military personnel are required to train and operate in challenging multi-stressor environments, which can affect hormonal levels, and subsequently compromise performance and recovery. The aims of this project were to 1) assess the impact of an eight-day military training exercise on salivary cortisol and testosterone, 2) track the recovery of these hormones during a period of reduced training. This was a prospective study whereby 30 soldiers (n = 27 men, n = 3 women) undergoing the Australian Army combat engineer 'Initial Employment Training' course were recruited and tracked over a 16-day study period which included an eight-day military training exercise. Non-stimulated saliva samples were collected at waking, 30 min post waking, and bedtime on days 1, 5, 9, 13, 15; measures of subjective load were collected on the same days. Sleep was measured continuously via actigraphy, across four sequential study periods; 1) baseline (PRE: days 1-4), 2) field training with total sleep deprivation (EX-FIELD: days 5-8), 3) training at simulated base camp with sleep restriction (EX-BASE: days 9-12), and 4) a three-day recovery period (REC: days 13-15). Morning cortisol concentrations were lower following EX-FIELD (p
ISSN:1932-6203
1932-6203
DOI:10.1371/journal.pone.0265121