Advancing the allostatic load model in military training research: from theory to application.

IF 3.2 3区 医学 Q2 PHYSIOLOGY
Frontiers in Physiology Pub Date : 2025-09-26 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fphys.2025.1638451
Evan D Feigel, Kristen J Koltun, Mita Lovalekar, Karl E Friedl, Brian J Martin, Bradley C Nindl
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Abstract

Research physiologists use theoretical models to test new empirical relationships between physiological variables and psycho-physiological outcomes and compare observed outcomes with theoretical predictions to support or refute models. Models, while valuable, often focus on a limited perspective as part of a larger reality. In understanding Warfighter health, a more holistic perspective within a model is needed since this population is exposed to a high degree of physical, cognitive, and emotional demands/loads during training throughout a career. Focusing on the physical performance aspects of occupational exposures is important; however, this neglects imperative interrelationships between the psychological and musculoskeletal domains of health, which must be quantified for early in-field prevention of injury, underperformance, or psychological harm. Chronic duration of the physiological stress response may disrupt adaptive mechanisms and result in allostatic load, characterized as a maladaptive biological process by which physiological stability ('allostasis') fails owing to repeated and chronic stress exposure, which can negatively affect physical and cognitive function. It may also increase vulnerability to atypical reductions in occupational physical performance and psychological and musculoskeletal health. The purpose of this review was to (i) summarize empirical research of atypical, negative consequences of military training on physical performance and psychological and musculoskeletal health (ii); reconsider the underlying biological process rendering maladaptive outcomes observed during training by leveraging a 'stress perspective' wherein military training-related stressors perturb stress systems and lead to allostatic load, which may serve as a mechanism by which maladaptation occurs; (iii) summarize the impact of allostatic load quantified by the Allostatic Load Index (ALI) on physical performance, psychological wellbeing, and musculoskeletal health; and (iv) propose the use of valid and reliable commercially-available wearable devices as tools to measure allostatic load by collecting longitudinal cardiometabolic and neurobehavioral (sleep) data during training and determining verifiable signals associated with ALI and maladaptive outcomes. Allostatic load is an evolving model that may be suited to understand the long-term health effects of military training-related stress. There is opportunity to improve our understanding of measurement tools involving wearables to establishing the relationship between allostatic load and long-term health outcomes in military personnel.

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推进军事训练研究中的适应负荷模型:从理论到应用。
研究生理学家使用理论模型来测试生理变量和心理生理结果之间的新的经验关系,并将观察到的结果与理论预测进行比较,以支持或反驳模型。模型虽然有价值,但通常只关注有限的视角,作为更大现实的一部分。为了理解战士的健康,需要在模型中有一个更全面的视角,因为这个人群在整个职业生涯的训练过程中暴露在高度的身体、认知和情感需求/负荷中。关注职业性暴露的身体表现方面是很重要的;然而,这忽略了心理和肌肉骨骼健康领域之间必不可少的相互关系,必须对其进行量化,以便及早在现场预防受伤、表现不佳或心理伤害。生理应激反应的长期持续可能破坏适应性机制并导致适应负荷,其特征是一种适应不良的生物过程,由于反复和慢性应激暴露,生理稳定性(“适应”)失效,这可能对身体和认知功能产生负面影响。它还可能增加对非典型职业体力表现和心理及肌肉骨骼健康下降的脆弱性。本次审查的目的是:(一)总结关于军事训练对身体表现、心理和肌肉骨骼健康的非典型负面影响的实证研究(二);利用“压力视角”重新考虑训练中观察到的导致适应不良结果的潜在生物过程,其中军事训练相关的压力源扰乱了应激系统并导致适应负荷,这可能是发生适应不良的机制;(iii)总结由适应负荷指数(ALI)量化的适应负荷对身体表现、心理健康和肌肉骨骼健康的影响;(iv)建议使用有效和可靠的商业可穿戴设备作为工具,通过在训练期间收集纵向心脏代谢和神经行为(睡眠)数据,并确定与ALI和适应不良结果相关的可验证信号,来测量适应负荷。适应负荷是一个不断发展的模型,可能适合于理解军事训练相关压力对健康的长期影响。有机会提高我们对涉及可穿戴设备的测量工具的理解,以建立军事人员的适应负荷与长期健康结果之间的关系。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.50
自引率
5.00%
发文量
2608
审稿时长
14 weeks
期刊介绍: Frontiers in Physiology is a leading journal in its field, publishing rigorously peer-reviewed research on the physiology of living systems, from the subcellular and molecular domains to the intact organism, and its interaction with the environment. Field Chief Editor George E. Billman at the Ohio State University Columbus is supported by an outstanding Editorial Board of international researchers. This multidisciplinary open-access journal is at the forefront of disseminating and communicating scientific knowledge and impactful discoveries to researchers, academics, clinicians and the public worldwide.
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