Overtraining syndrome: a practical guide
- PMID: 23016079
- PMCID: PMC3435910
- DOI: 10.1177/1941738111434406
Overtraining syndrome: a practical guide
Abstract
Context: Fatigue and underperformance are common in athletes. Understanding overtraining syndrome (OTS) is helpful in the evaluation, management, and education of athletes.
Evidence acquisition: Relevant articles in English were searched with OVID (1948-2011) and PubMed using the following keywords: overtraining syndrome, overtraining, overreaching, unexplained underperformance, staleness, pathophysiology, management, treatment, evaluation. Bibliographies were reviewed for additional resources.
Results: OTS appears to be a maladapted response to excessive exercise without adequate rest, resulting in perturbations of multiple body systems (neurologic, endocrinologic, immunologic) coupled with mood changes. Many hypotheses of OTS pathogenesis are reviewed, and a clinical approach to athletes with possible OTS (including history, testing, and prevention) is presented.
Conclusions: OTS remains a clinical diagnosis with arbitrary definitions per the European College of Sports Science's position statement. History and, in most situations, limited serologies are helpful. However, much remains to be learned given that most past research has been on athletes with overreaching rather than OTS.
Keywords: evaluation; management; overreaching; overtraining; overtraining syndrome; pathophysiology; staleness; treatment; unexplained underperformance.
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References
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- Angeli A, Minetto M, Dovio A, et al. The overtraining syndrome in athletes: a stress-related disorder. J Endocrinol Invest. 2004;27:603-612 - PubMed
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- Armstrong LE, VanHeest JL. The unknown mechanism of the overtraining syndrome: clues from depression and psychoneuroimmunology. Sports Med. 2002;32:185-209 - PubMed
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- Budgett R, Hiscock N, Arida R, et al. The effects of the 5-HT2C agonist m-chlorphenylpiperazine on elite athletes with unexplained underperformance syndrome (overtraining). Br J Sports Med. 2010;44:280-283 - PubMed
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