Position statement. Part two: Maintaining immune health.
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- Neil P. Walsh, Michael Gleeson, David B. Pyne, David C. Nieman, Firdaus S. Dhabhar, Roy J. Shephard, Samuel J. Oliver, Stéphane Bermon, Alma Kajėnienė
- Journal
- Loughborough University Institutional Repository (Loughborough University)
- Year
- 2011
- Citations
- 371
Abstract
The physical training undertaken by athletes is one of a set of lifestyle or behav-ioural factors that can influence immune function, health and ultimately exercise performance. Others factors including potential exposure to pathogens, health status, lifestyle behaviours, sleep and recovery, nutrition and psychosocial issues, need to be considered alongside the physical demands of an athlete’s training pro-gramme. The general consensus on managing training to maintain immune health is to start with a programme of low to moderate volume and intensity; employ a gradual and periodised increase in training volumes and loads; add variety to limit training monotony and stress; avoid excessively heavy training loads that could lead to exhaustion, illness or injury; include non-specific cross-training to offset stale-ness; ensure sufficient rest and recovery; and instigate a testing programme for identifying signs of performance deterioration and manifestations of physical stress. Inter-individual variability in immunocompetence, recovery, exercise capacity, non-training stress factors, and stress tolerance likely explains the differ-