Effects of “Living High‐Training Low and High” on Sleep, Heart Rate Variability, and Psychological Responses in Elite Female Cyclists
Thibaud Pirlot, Thibaud Mihailovic, Philippe Gimenez, Gregoire P. Millet, Franck Brocherie, Eric Fruchart, Gilles Ravier, Bertrand Baron, Romain Bouzigon, Sandrine Guirronnet, Emmanuel Brunet, Alain Groslambert

TL;DR
This study explores how a high-altitude training method affects sleep, heart rate, and stress in elite female cyclists.
Contribution
It provides the first insights into psychophysiological stress in female athletes using the LHTLH training method.
Findings
Early acclimatization to LHTLH causes sleep disturbances and altered heart rate variability.
Restorative sleep returns after 4 days, but HRV and stress remain impaired for at least 10 days.
Athletes can increase training load after initial acclimatization despite ongoing physiological stress.
Abstract
“Living High‐Training Low and High” (LHTLH) is an altitude/hypoxic training method used to improve physical performance at sea level. The aim of this exploratory study was to investigate the effects of LHTLH on sleep, heart rate variability (HRV), and psychological stress in 10 elite/international level female cyclists (mean age: 17.3 ± 1.2 years). Participants were monitored for 19 days divided into 3 periods: (i) normoxia (5 days preceding LHTLH), (ii) early acclimatization (day 1–4 of LHTLH), and (iii) middle acclimatization (day 5–14) performed in hypoxic rooms (FiO2 = 15.09%). Questionnaires of psychological stress and sleep disturbance, sleep architecture (determined through an electroencephalography sleep headband), and HRV (measured at rest with a chest strap) were recorded during the 3 periods. The results found that, compared to normoxia, there was no significant difference in…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHigh Altitude and Hypoxia · Heart Rate Variability and Autonomic Control · Neuroscience of respiration and sleep
