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Salivary hormone concentrations and technical-tactical performance indicators in beach volleyball: preliminary evidence

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Salivary hormone concentrations and technical-tactical performance indicators in beach volleyball: preliminary evidence. / Costa, Yago P.; Domingos-Gomes, Jarbas; Lautenbach, Franziska et al.
In: Frontiers in Sports and Active Living, Vol. 4, 830185, 28.07.2022.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Costa, YP, Domingos-Gomes, J, Lautenbach, F, Hayes, LD, Nakamura, FY, Lima, J, Castellano, L & Batista, GR 2022, 'Salivary hormone concentrations and technical-tactical performance indicators in beach volleyball: preliminary evidence', Frontiers in Sports and Active Living, vol. 4, 830185. https://doi.org/10.3389/fspor.2022.830185

APA

Costa, Y. P., Domingos-Gomes, J., Lautenbach, F., Hayes, L. D., Nakamura, F. Y., Lima, J., Castellano, L., & Batista, G. R. (2022). Salivary hormone concentrations and technical-tactical performance indicators in beach volleyball: preliminary evidence. Frontiers in Sports and Active Living, 4, Article 830185. https://doi.org/10.3389/fspor.2022.830185

Vancouver

Costa YP, Domingos-Gomes J, Lautenbach F, Hayes LD, Nakamura FY, Lima J et al. Salivary hormone concentrations and technical-tactical performance indicators in beach volleyball: preliminary evidence. Frontiers in Sports and Active Living. 2022 Jul 28;4:830185. doi: 10.3389/fspor.2022.830185

Author

Costa, Yago P. ; Domingos-Gomes, Jarbas ; Lautenbach, Franziska et al. / Salivary hormone concentrations and technical-tactical performance indicators in beach volleyball : preliminary evidence. In: Frontiers in Sports and Active Living. 2022 ; Vol. 4.

Bibtex

@article{4ec14f9a409b42cd9f12ef284f2bbf54,
title = "Salivary hormone concentrations and technical-tactical performance indicators in beach volleyball: preliminary evidence",
abstract = "The present study aimed to investigate (i) differences in salivary testosterone and cortisol concentrations before, during, and after simulated beach volleyball match, depending on match outcome (winning vs. losing); (ii) the relationship between technical-tactical performance indicators in beach volleyball and salivary hormonal concentrations (i.e., testosterone, cortisol). We hypothesized (i) salivary testosterone concentrations would be greater in winners and salivary cortisol would be lower; (ii) testosterone would associate with positive technical-tactical performance and cortisol would associate with negative technical-tactical performance. Sixteen athletes participated in the study and were grouped according to the result of a simulated game (winners: n = 8; losers: n = 8). Salivary hormone concentration of testosterone and cortisol were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (pre-match, post first set, and post-match), and the coefficient of performance and efficiency were used as technical-tactical performance indicators. Regarding testosterone, there was a large effect size for match outcome after the first set (i.e. Winner vs. Losers) and a moderate effect size for the time in winners (pre-match vs. post-match). Regarding cortisol, there was a moderate effect size of time in losers only (pre-match vs. post-match). Moreover, cortisol pre-match was negatively correlated with the offensive performance (attack performance coefficient: r= -0.541; p= 0.030; attack efficiency: r= -0.568; p= 0.022). In conclusion, the effect of match outcome on testosterone and cortisol levels was moderate in winners and losers, respectively. Moreover, resting cortisol concentration appears to be related to a diminished attack technical-tactical performance. However, larger confirmatory studies are required to confirm these data to corroborate winning increases testosterone levels and/or reduces cortisol in a sporting setting.",
author = "Costa, {Yago P.} and Jarbas Domingos-Gomes and Franziska Lautenbach and Hayes, {Lawrence D} and Nakamura, {F{\'a}bio Y.} and Jefferson Lima and L{\'u}cio Castellano and Batista, {Gilm{\'a}rio R.}",
year = "2022",
month = jul,
day = "28",
doi = "10.3389/fspor.2022.830185",
language = "English",
volume = "4",
journal = "Frontiers in Sports and Active Living",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Salivary hormone concentrations and technical-tactical performance indicators in beach volleyball

T2 - preliminary evidence

AU - Costa, Yago P.

AU - Domingos-Gomes, Jarbas

AU - Lautenbach, Franziska

AU - Hayes, Lawrence D

AU - Nakamura, Fábio Y.

AU - Lima, Jefferson

AU - Castellano, Lúcio

AU - Batista, Gilmário R.

PY - 2022/7/28

Y1 - 2022/7/28

N2 - The present study aimed to investigate (i) differences in salivary testosterone and cortisol concentrations before, during, and after simulated beach volleyball match, depending on match outcome (winning vs. losing); (ii) the relationship between technical-tactical performance indicators in beach volleyball and salivary hormonal concentrations (i.e., testosterone, cortisol). We hypothesized (i) salivary testosterone concentrations would be greater in winners and salivary cortisol would be lower; (ii) testosterone would associate with positive technical-tactical performance and cortisol would associate with negative technical-tactical performance. Sixteen athletes participated in the study and were grouped according to the result of a simulated game (winners: n = 8; losers: n = 8). Salivary hormone concentration of testosterone and cortisol were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (pre-match, post first set, and post-match), and the coefficient of performance and efficiency were used as technical-tactical performance indicators. Regarding testosterone, there was a large effect size for match outcome after the first set (i.e. Winner vs. Losers) and a moderate effect size for the time in winners (pre-match vs. post-match). Regarding cortisol, there was a moderate effect size of time in losers only (pre-match vs. post-match). Moreover, cortisol pre-match was negatively correlated with the offensive performance (attack performance coefficient: r= -0.541; p= 0.030; attack efficiency: r= -0.568; p= 0.022). In conclusion, the effect of match outcome on testosterone and cortisol levels was moderate in winners and losers, respectively. Moreover, resting cortisol concentration appears to be related to a diminished attack technical-tactical performance. However, larger confirmatory studies are required to confirm these data to corroborate winning increases testosterone levels and/or reduces cortisol in a sporting setting.

AB - The present study aimed to investigate (i) differences in salivary testosterone and cortisol concentrations before, during, and after simulated beach volleyball match, depending on match outcome (winning vs. losing); (ii) the relationship between technical-tactical performance indicators in beach volleyball and salivary hormonal concentrations (i.e., testosterone, cortisol). We hypothesized (i) salivary testosterone concentrations would be greater in winners and salivary cortisol would be lower; (ii) testosterone would associate with positive technical-tactical performance and cortisol would associate with negative technical-tactical performance. Sixteen athletes participated in the study and were grouped according to the result of a simulated game (winners: n = 8; losers: n = 8). Salivary hormone concentration of testosterone and cortisol were measured by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (pre-match, post first set, and post-match), and the coefficient of performance and efficiency were used as technical-tactical performance indicators. Regarding testosterone, there was a large effect size for match outcome after the first set (i.e. Winner vs. Losers) and a moderate effect size for the time in winners (pre-match vs. post-match). Regarding cortisol, there was a moderate effect size of time in losers only (pre-match vs. post-match). Moreover, cortisol pre-match was negatively correlated with the offensive performance (attack performance coefficient: r= -0.541; p= 0.030; attack efficiency: r= -0.568; p= 0.022). In conclusion, the effect of match outcome on testosterone and cortisol levels was moderate in winners and losers, respectively. Moreover, resting cortisol concentration appears to be related to a diminished attack technical-tactical performance. However, larger confirmatory studies are required to confirm these data to corroborate winning increases testosterone levels and/or reduces cortisol in a sporting setting.

U2 - 10.3389/fspor.2022.830185

DO - 10.3389/fspor.2022.830185

M3 - Journal article

VL - 4

JO - Frontiers in Sports and Active Living

JF - Frontiers in Sports and Active Living

M1 - 830185

ER -