Sleep, Dance Exposure Hours, and Injury Risk in Collegiate Dancers.

IF 1.1 Q3 SPORT SCIENCES
Victoria Fauntroy, Amelia Stork, Jena Hansen-Honeycutt, Rajwinder Deu, Holly Klee, Joel Martin, Jatin P Ambegaonkar
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Introduction: Sleep is essential for athletes and dancers to optimize recovery. Poor sleep negatively affects cognitive function and injury risk in athletes. Increased athletic participation (hours) is associated with decreased total sleep and quality in athletes. Still, information about how sleep is related with exposure hours and injury in collegiate dancers remains unclear. We examined the relationships among the Athlete Sleep Behavior Questionnaire (ASBQ), dance exposure hours (DEHr), and injuries in collegiate dancers over a 7 -month period (August 2019-February 2020).

Methods: Seventy-two dancers (58 female, 14 male; 19.7 ± 1.4 years) completed the 18 question ASBQ at the start of each month (Scale:1 = Never, 5 = Always; Global Scores ≤36 = "good sleep behavior" and ≥42 = "poor sleep behavior"). A DEHr was recorded as 1 hour of dance participation in class, rehearsal, or performance. Injuries were defined as any condition where the dancer sought medical attention, and we calculated an injury rate for total injuries (IR/1000 DEHr). Pearson correlations examined relationships among ASBQ, DEHr, and injuries (P ≤ .05).

Results: Dancers participated in 467.8 ± 45.7 DEHr over 7 months, with 14 dancers suffering 18 injuries (IR = 0.5/1000-DEHr; 95% CI:0.3-0.8). Overall, dancers reported poor sleep behaviors (42.6 ± 6.4). ASBQ scores, DEHr, and injuries in August-October, and December-February were not related, except for a weak positive relationship between ASBQ scores and DEHr in November (r = .28, P = .04).

Conclusions: Sleep, DEHr, and injuries were inconsistently related in collegiate dancers. Sleep and DEHr were only correlated during the month where dancers had 2 performance weeks. While we did not observe this relationship every month, performance weeks may have negatively affected sleep in November. Despite consistent poor sleep, sleep did not seem to negatively affect injury risk during the 7 -month study period. Future researchers should validate the ASBQ in dancers.

大学生舞者的睡眠、舞蹈暴露时间和受伤风险。
睡眠对运动员和舞者来说是必不可少的,以优化恢复。睡眠不足会对运动员的认知功能和受伤风险产生负面影响。运动时间的增加与运动员总睡眠和质量的下降有关。然而,关于大学生舞者的睡眠与暴露时间和受伤之间的关系的信息仍不清楚。我们研究了7个月期间(2019年8月- 2020年2月)大学生舞者的运动员睡眠行为问卷(ASBQ)、舞蹈暴露时间(DEHr)和受伤之间的关系。方法:舞蹈演员72人,其中女性58人,男性14人;19.7±1.4岁)每月初完成18道ASBQ(量表:1 =从不,5 =总是;Global Scores≤36 =“良好睡眠行为”,≥42 =“不良睡眠行为”)。DEHr记录为在课堂、排练或表演中参与舞蹈1小时。损伤被定义为舞者寻求医疗照顾的任何情况,我们计算了总损伤率(IR/1000 DEHr)。Pearson相关性检验了ASBQ、DEHr和损伤之间的关系(P≤0.05)。结果:舞者在7个月内参加了467.8±45.7 DEHr,其中14名舞者受伤18次(IR = 0.5/1000-DEHr;95%置信区间:0.3—-0.8)。总体而言,舞蹈演员的睡眠行为较差(42.6±6.4)。8 - 10月和12 - 2月ASBQ评分、DEHr和受伤均不相关,11月ASBQ评分与DEHr呈弱正相关(r =。28, p = .04)。结论:大学生舞者的睡眠、DEHr和损伤的相关性不一致。睡眠和DEHr只在舞者有两个表演周的月份相关。虽然我们不是每个月都观察到这种关系,但表现周可能会对11月份的睡眠产生负面影响。尽管持续的睡眠不足,在7个月的研究期间,睡眠似乎并没有对受伤风险产生负面影响。未来的研究人员应该在舞者身上验证ASBQ。
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
1.80
自引率
11.10%
发文量
33
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