Overtraining Tires Mind and Body
Too much physical training can adversely affect decision-making.
Here’s another reason to encourage exercise enthusiasts not to overtrain. New research shows that cognitive fatigue is as much an effect of overtraining as physical fatigue.
To evaluate whether overtraining can “tire” the brain, researchers at l’hôpital de La Pitié-Salpêtrière in Paris compared the effect of normal training with training overload on the ability of 37 trained male endurance athletes (average age, 35 years) to make decisions. In addition to offering questionnaires, investigators used fMRI scanning to measure brain activity during cognitive exercises.
Data analysis confirmed the researchers’ hypothesis that training overload might affect the brain in much the same way as prolonged intellectual work. Overtrained athletes felt more fatigue overall and showed more impulsiveness in decision-making and less ability to defer rewards, even though this conflicted with longer-term goals. Brain scans revealed lower activity in the brain region related to cognitive control. The study authors concluded that their results provide causal evidence for a functional link between enduring physical exercise and exertion of cognitive control.
The study appeared in Current Biology (2019; 29 [19], 3289–97).
Shirley Eichenberger-Archer, JD, MA
Shirley Archer, JD, MA, is an internationally acknowledged integrative health and mindfulness specialist, best-selling author of 16 fitness and wellness books translated into multiple languages and sold worldwide, award-winning health journalist, contributing editor to Fitness Journal, media spokesperson, and IDEA's 2008 Fitness Instructor of the Year. She's a 25-year industry veteran and former health and fitness educator at the Stanford Prevention Research Center, who has served on multiple industry committees and co-authored trade books and manuals for ACE, ACSM and YMCA of the USA. She has appeared on TV worldwide and was a featured trainer on America's Next Top Model.