Location

Turner Gymnasium

Access Type

Campus Access Only

Presentation Type

Digital poster

Entry Number

2418

Start Date

4-16-2025 12:00 PM

End Date

4-16-2025 1:15 PM

School

School of Medicine and Health Sciences

Department

Athletic Training

Keywords

sleep deprivation, sleep quantity, sleep hygiene, college, athlete, running, endurance, performance

Abstract

Healthy adults are recommended 7-9 hours of sleep each night by the National Sleep Foundation. Unfortunately, many high-level athletes struggle to meet this standard due to factors like their training schedules, screen time, caffeine intake and timing, and competition stress. Even a single night of sleep deprivation has been shown to decrease maximal heart rate, peak oxygen consumption, and time to exhaustion for athletes running on treadmills. Aside from athletic performance, sleep plays an important role in exercise recovery, cognitive function, metabolic regulation, immune function, and other restorative physiological processes. Stress and anxiety can disrupt sleep, early training sessions can decrease sleep duration, and chronic sleep restriction can reduce REM sleep, further changing the individual’s sleep patterns, recovery, and memory consolidation. Additional factors like muscle soreness, travel, and inconsistent sleep environments can also negatively affect sleep duration and quality. Given the crucial role of sleep for recovery and performance, optimizing quality sleep should be a prime concern for endurance athletes striving to perform at their best.

Primary Faculty Mentor(s)

Dr. Debbie Bradney, Dr. Emily Evans, Dr. Tom Bowman

Primary Faculty Mentor(s) Department

Athletic Training

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Apr 16th, 12:00 PM Apr 16th, 1:15 PM

Sleep deprivation and running endurance in NCAA endurance athletes: A critically appraised topic.

Turner Gymnasium

Healthy adults are recommended 7-9 hours of sleep each night by the National Sleep Foundation. Unfortunately, many high-level athletes struggle to meet this standard due to factors like their training schedules, screen time, caffeine intake and timing, and competition stress. Even a single night of sleep deprivation has been shown to decrease maximal heart rate, peak oxygen consumption, and time to exhaustion for athletes running on treadmills. Aside from athletic performance, sleep plays an important role in exercise recovery, cognitive function, metabolic regulation, immune function, and other restorative physiological processes. Stress and anxiety can disrupt sleep, early training sessions can decrease sleep duration, and chronic sleep restriction can reduce REM sleep, further changing the individual’s sleep patterns, recovery, and memory consolidation. Additional factors like muscle soreness, travel, and inconsistent sleep environments can also negatively affect sleep duration and quality. Given the crucial role of sleep for recovery and performance, optimizing quality sleep should be a prime concern for endurance athletes striving to perform at their best.