The use of bioresonance therapy in the correction of the athlete’s overtraining syndrome
By V.A. Badtiev, in And. Pavlov, M.N. Khokhlov, A.V. Pacina
2018
Rationale. Excessive physical activity leads to exhaustion and disruption of the functions of organs and systems, which det to disadaptation, vegetative imbalance and disruption of the cardiovascular, nervous, endocrine and other systems, forming the syndrome of overtraining. In this regard, it is pathogenetically justified to use physiotherapeutic non-invasive methods for correcting physiological parameters and psycho-emotional status, one of which is bioresonance therapy (BRT).
Purpose of the study— to study the effect of BRT on the condition of athletes with overtraining syndrome.
Methods. The study included 60 athletes with overtraining syndrome, divided into two groups of 30 people (the groups were comparable in age, gender, sport and sports qualification). The 1st (main) group included athletes, in whose rehabilitation treatment BRT was used, the 2nd (control) group, who received placebo procedures. All athletes before and after treatment underwent a complex of clinical-functional, instrumental research methods.
Results. The use of BRT significantly increases parasympathetic influences on the heart rhythm, reduces the intensity of the central circuit of its regulation; contributes to the economization of cardiac activity; has a hypotensive effect, more pronounced in relation to systolic blood pressure (BP), has a normalizing effect on BP variability in patients with its initial instability, significantly reduces the time index when monitoring BP, and also has a normalizing effect on its daily rhythm and the speed of morning rise in diastolic blood pressure.
Conclusion nie. BRT can be considered as a method for correcting the overtraining syndrome in athletes with increased increased activity of the sympathetic nervous system.
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