# Sex Differences in the Acute Effects of Early Partial and Total Sleep Deprivation on Strength, Power, and Endurance Performance in Resistance-Trained Participants

**Authors:** Marta del Val-Manzano, Juan Jesús Montalvo-Alonso, Paola Gonzalo-Encabo, David Valadés, Carmen Ferragut, Alberto Pérez-López

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/jfmk11010083 · Journal of Functional Morphology and Kinesiology · 2026-02-19

## TL;DR

This study found that sleep deprivation affects strength and endurance performance differently in men and women, with men showing reduced strength and women showing reduced endurance.

## Contribution

The study reveals sex-specific responses to sleep deprivation in resistance-trained individuals using velocity-based performance metrics.

## Key findings

- Males showed reduced strength performance at moderate loads under sleep deprivation.
- Females experienced declines in muscular endurance under sleep deprivation.
- Sleep deprivation effects varied by sex and type of sleep deprivation (partial vs. total).

## Abstract

Background: Sleep is essential for athletic performance, yet the specific effects of sleep deprivation are not well defined. Evidence in resistance-trained populations is limited regarding sex-specific responses and velocity-based performance across different loads. Purpose: This study examined sex differences in the impact of total (0 h) and partial (4 h) sleep deprivation versus normal sleep (8 h) on strength, power, and endurance performance in resistance-trained individuals. Methods: Twenty-four resistance-trained participants (male/female, 12/12; age: 22 ± 3 years) completed a randomized, cross-over, counterbalanced trial including one baseline control night (8 h at home sleep) and three experimental conditions in the laboratory: (a) 8 h sleep (NS), (b) 4 h sleep (ESD), (c) 0 h sleep (SD). Strength was assessed at 25%, 50%, 75%, 90% and 100% 1RM for bench press and back squat (half-squat depth, ~90° knee flexion), in a Smith machine, followed by a muscular endurance test at 65% 1RM (set-to-failure). Isometric strength and vertical jump test were also performed. Results: At 50% 1RM, significant sleep and sleep-by-sex effects were observed for Vmean in both exercise (p < 0.05, ηp2 > 0.09), an effect only noted in males, with reduced performance under ESD and SD compared to NS (7–13%, p < 0.05, g > 0.50). In the muscular endurance test, sleep and sleep-by-sex effects were found (p < 0.05, ηp2 < 0.22), an effect only found in females during the back squat, showing performance declines in Vmean in ESD and SD compared to NS (7–12%, p < 0.05, g > 0.2). Conclusions: Total and partial sleep deprivation impairs muscular performance differently by sex. Males experienced reduced strength at moderate loads, while females showed declines in muscular endurance.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Sleep Deprivation (MESH:D012892)

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

53 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13028445/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13028445