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Effects of sleep disturbance on functional and physiological outcomes in collegiate athletes: A scoping review

Journal

SLEEP MEDICINE
Volume 81, Issue -, Pages 8-19

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.sleep.2021.01.046

Keywords

Sleep; College athletes; Actigraphy; Academic performance; Athletic performance; Athletic injuries

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The study found that most research focused on the relationship between cognitive performance, athletic performance, and injury rate in collegiate athletes and sleep, but studies using biomarkers and physiological measures or imaging were relatively few. Most studies indicated that poor sleep quality and quantity led to negative cognitive and academic outcomes.
Objective: To investigate sleep disturbances and circadian timing changes on functional and physiological correlates specifically in collegiate athletes. Design: Scoping Review. Data sources: PubMed MEDLINE, SPORT-Discus, CINAHL, ERIC ProQuest, Web of Science. Eligibility criteria: Articles in English, studying college athletes 18-24 years old, employing a sleep measurement, and a comparison measure of cognitive, academic performance, athletic performance, injury rate, biomarkers and physiological measures, or imaging. Results: Thirty articles met inclusion criteria. There was wide range of study design, sport studied, modality used to measure sleep, frequency of sleep measurements, and functional and physiological outcomes across studies. Sleep measurements varied greatly in frequency of data collection and type of measurement tool, with the majority using a sleep questionnaire. While all variables of interest were represented within the review, most had a focus on cognitive performance, athletic performance, or injury rate as a function of sleep. Studies using biomarkers and physiological measures or imaging were largely underrepresented. Few studies used biomarkers and physiological measures, and one study used imaging measures. Most studies in this review reported negative cognitive and academic outcomes with worse sleep quality and quantity. Conclusions: Sleep is critical to maintaining optimal health and collegiate athletes represent a unique population given their unique time constraints, stresses, and sleep behaviors. Findings on athletic performance and injury rate as a function of sleep were mixed. Employing standardized objective methodologies in future work will allow for better understanding of the influence of sleep on the overall wellbeing and performance of college athletes. (c) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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