Effects of Napping on Cognitive and Physical Performance in Sleep-Deprived Elite Kung-Fu Athletes
Anis Saddoud, Mohamed Frikha, Mehdi Chlif, Abdulmalek K. Bursais, Anwar Al-Nuaim

TL;DR
A 45-minute nap helps sleep-deprived Kung-Fu athletes recover cognitive skills more than physical abilities, improving decision-making and reaction time.
Contribution
Shows that short naps specifically improve cognitive recovery in sleep-deprived martial arts athletes.
Findings
Sleep deprivation reduced vigour by 53.8% and vertical jump height by 3.57 cm.
Napping improved decision accuracy by 14.1% and reaction time by 16.1% in sleep-deprived athletes.
Physical performance gains from napping were modest, with a 2.4% increase in vertical jump height.
Abstract
Background: Total sleep deprivation (TSD) negatively affects athletic performance by impairing mood, anaerobic performance, and decision-making in martial arts athletes. This study examined whether a 45 min nap can alleviate deficits in mood, anaerobic performance, and decision-making caused by TSD in elite Kung-Fu athletes. Methods: Twenty-four elite male Kung-Fu athletes (age: 20.67 ± 1.76 years) participated in four randomised conditions: normal sleep, without sleep deprivation + nap, total sleep deprivation (36 h awake), and TSD + nap. Mood states were assessed in terms of the POMS-f, perceptual responses, decision-making via video-based tasks, barrage test, anaerobic performance through vertical and horizontal jumps, and isometric strength. Results: Sleep deprivation significantly affected mood, with vigour dropping by 53.8% (p < 0.001), impaired physical performance, with vertical…
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Taxonomy
TopicsSleep and related disorders · Sleep and Work-Related Fatigue · Sleep and Wakefulness Research
