Características cardioeléctricas e da pressão arterial durante a recuperação após exercício de alta intensidade em atletas de artes marciais

Autores

  • Nizar Lotfi Laboratorio Multidisciplinar de Ciencias de la Educación e Ingeniería de la Formación (LMSEIF). Evaluación de las Ciencias del Deporte y Didáctica de la Actividad Física. Escuela Normal Superior (ENS-C), Universidad Hassan II de Casablanca, Marruecos https://orcid.org/0009-0009-4590-4795
  • Omar Ben Rakaa Laboratorio Multidisciplinario de Ciencias de la Educación e Ingeniería de la Formación (LMSEIF). Evaluación de las Ciencias del Deporte y Didáctica de la Actividad Física. Escuela Normal Superior (ENS-C), Universidad Hassan II de Casablanca, Marruecos https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2181-5247
  • Carla Lourenço Escola Superior de Educação de Viseu, IPV Universidad de Beira Interior CIDEI (Centro de Estudios en Educación e Innovación), Portugal
  • Mohamed Madani Laboratorio Multidisciplinario de Ciencias de la Educación e Ingeniería de la Formación (LMSEIF). Evaluación de las Ciencias del Deporte y Didáctica de la Actividad Física. Escuela Normal Superior (ENS-C), Universidad Hassan II de Casablanca, Marruecos https://orcid.org/0009-0006-5764-1177

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.47197/retos.v78.118822

Palavras-chave:

Artes marciais, frequência cardíaca, eletrocardiograma, hipotensão pós-exercício, recuperação, saturação de oxigénio

Resumo

Contexto. As artes marciais, caracterizadas por esforços intermitentes de alta intensidade, geram restrições cardiovasculares específicas. Poucos estudos examinaram as respostas cardioelétricas e hemodinâmicas pós-exercício neste contexto, particularmente durante a fase de recuperação.

Objetivo. Este estudo teve como objetivo analisar as variações da frequência cardíaca (FC), pressão arterial (sistólica: PAS, diastólica: PAD), saturação de oxigénio (SpO₂) e parâmetros eletrocardiográficos (PR, QT, QRS, QTc, RV5, SV1) em praticantes de artes marciais antes, imediatamente após e até 30 minutos após o exercício intenso.

Métodos. Vinte e quatro atletas do sexo masculino realizaram uma sessão de alta intensidade simulando competição (≥85% da FC máxima). As medidas fisiológicas foram recolhidas em quatro momentos (repouso, final do exercício e recuperação de 15 e 30 minutos). Foram realizadas ANOVA de medidas repetidas e análise fatorial.

Resultados. Observou-se hipotensão significativa após o exercício (PAS: −11,33% aos 30 min; PAD: −14,63% no final do exercício). A frequência cardíaca duplicou no final do esforço (138 bpm), com recuperação parcial aos 30 minutos. O intervalo QT encurtou e depois normalizou gradualmente. A SpO₂ apresentou uma ligeira queda (−1,28%) antes de voltar a aumentar. A análise fatorial identificou agrupamentos de variáveis ​​inter-relacionadas.

Conclusão: As artes marciais induzem respostas cardioelétricas transitórias específicas. Estes achados realçam a importância da monitorização individualizada da recuperação tanto para a otimização do desempenho como para a prevenção cardiovascular.

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Publicado

01-05-2026

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Artigos de caráter científico: trabalhos de pesquisas básicas e/ou aplicadas.

Como Citar

Lotfi, N., Ben Rakaa, O., Lourenço, C., & Madani, M. (2026). Características cardioeléctricas e da pressão arterial durante a recuperação após exercício de alta intensidade em atletas de artes marciais. Retos, 78, 693-704. https://doi.org/10.47197/retos.v78.118822