# Cutting weight, gaining stress: the hidden battle that outweighs fight day tension in kickboxing

**Authors:** Burak Karababa, Süleyman Ulupınar, Cebrail Gençoǧlu, Selim Asan, Deniz Bedir, İzzet İnce, Salih Çabuk, Ferhat Canyurt, Serhat Özbay, Kaan Kaya

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2026.1762659 · Frontiers in Psychology · 2026-03-16

## TL;DR

This study shows that rapid weight-cutting in kickboxers causes prolonged physiological stress, even after rehydration and before competition.

## Contribution

The study reveals a dissociation between subjective and physiological recovery after rapid weight-cutting in athletes.

## Key findings

- Weight-cutting kickboxers had consistently lower RMSSD values, indicating sustained physiological stress.
- Subjective stress peaked before weigh-in and remained higher than pre-match levels despite post-weigh-in recovery.
- Physiological recovery was incomplete on match day, even though subjective stress stabilized.

## Abstract

This study investigated the effects of rapid weight-cutting on stress in elite kickboxers by analyzing Heart Rate Variability (HRV) and subjective stress levels using a Visual Analog Scale (VAS).

Data were collected across seven standardized time points: Weigh-in Morning, Pre-Weigh-in, Post-Weigh-in, Post–Weigh-in Meal, Match Day Morning, Pre-Match, and Post-Match. Participants were divided into a weight-cutting group (n = 12), who reduced at least 5% of their body weight within 48 h before competition, and a control group (n = 13), who maintained regular training and nutrition. HRV was measured using a chest-strap electrocardiography-based heart rate sensor (Polar H10) to obtain high-accuracy R–R interval data under real-world competition conditions.

The weight-cutting group showed consistently lower RMSSD values, indicating sustained physiological stress. Subjective stress levels were also higher in this group, peaking before the weigh-in and exceeding pre-match levels. A marked reduction in perceived stress was observed immediately after the weigh-in, suggesting psychological relief. However, despite post-weigh-in rehydration and feeding, RMSSD values remained suppressed on match day, indicating incomplete physiological recovery despite stabilized subjective stress. The control group demonstrated relatively stable HRV and VAS values across all time points.

These findings highlight the prolonged autonomic strain associated with rapid weight-cutting and demonstrate a dissociation between subjective and physiological recovery. Monitoring both autonomic and perceptual stress responses may be essential for safeguarding athlete health and optimizing performance in weight-category sports.

ClinicalTrials.gov, identifier: NCT06860204.

## Full text

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## References

26 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13034472/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13034472