- 1Department of Education and Lifelong Learning, Faculty of Social and Educational Sciences, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway
- 2The Norwegian Olympic Sport Center, Trondheim, Norway
- 3School of Sport Sciences, Faculty of Health Sciences, UiT, The Arctic University of Norway, Tromsø, Norway
- 4Nofima AS, Ås, Norway
The current study investigated if Bio-Electro-Magnetic-Energy-Regulation (BEMER) therapy is affecting subjective sleep among a sample of 21 elite female football players in a Norwegian top series club. Subjective sleep was measured each day over a period of 273 consecutive days by using a smartphone application, PM Reporter Pro, which scheduled push messages to remind the participants to report sleep every morning. The study was conducted as a quasi-experimental design, with a control period before the introduction of BEMER therapy that lasted for 3 months, followed by an intervention period where BEMER therapy was used that lasted for 5 months. The collected data from the players in the control period served as their control compared to the data collected from the players in the intervention period. Analyses of variance (ANOVA) with False Discovery Rate adjusted p-values show that subjective sleep duration and subjective sleep quality are significantly reduced on game nights, both in the control period and in the experiment period. The results also show that subjective sleep duration and subjective sleep quality significantly increase in the experiment period compared to the control period. The findings indicate that BEMER therapy might serve as a tool to improve sleep.
1 Introduction
Sleep is the most crucial state of the body to gain optimal restoration and recovery of virtually all major systems of the body that are required for athlete progression in sport (1–3). Both physical, neural, and psychological restoration happen during effective sleep (4–6), and sleep has consequently been recognized as a crucial part of recovery for elite athletes in sports (7–9). An athlete's perceived effectiveness and quality of own sleep and daytime functioning are defined as the person's sleep quality (10). Thus, sleep quality is high when the athletes gain both the needed duration of sleep and an appropriate distribution of the different sleep stages during the night (11). Importantly, the need for sleep is associated to the daytime loads the athlete is exposed to, and the major systems of an athlete's body are restored when sleep quality is high (12).
Athletes in elite sports are often exposed to both physical and mental loads that are close to or on the absolute limits of their tolerance (2, 13, 14). Therefore, elite athletes' sleep is found to be crucial (15). Sleep is especially found to be important in elite football (soccer) because of the extraordinary cognitive, emotional and physical loads that are associated with elite football games (16, 17).
Interestingly, the physical demands in women's elite football have significantly increased the last decade and the physical actions need to be both more powerful and faster (18–22). Faster movements causes players to perceive the movements of team and opponent players more rapidly, make faster decisions in the play-counter play, and execute the needed actions to outplay the opponent team faster (23, 24). Thus, the cognitive loads in women's elite football especially peak on game days caused by the faster shifting movements among team- and opponent players (17, 25). The physical loads are also found to significantly peak on game days because of the high occurrences of demanding actions such as sprinting, sudden changes in movement directions, accelerations and decelerations, powerful tackles, and maximal jumps (26–29). Such considerable physical loads often lead to muscle fiber micro ruptures and muscular fatigue (30), and the cognitive loads might lead to perceptual-cognitive overload (19). Such a peak in physical and cognitive loads leads to increased need for recovery (31, 32), and such loads, especially associated to women's elite football games, require substantial recovery time (33, 34).
However, physical and cognitive efforts associated to football games might lead to disturbances in the players' physiology and neural processes, and might negatively affect sleep (17, 29). Particularly football games are found to negatively affect the following nights of sleep (27). Studies show that football games reduce both the players' sleep duration and their sleep quality (17, 34, 35). One study shows a reduction of 65 min in sleep duration after women's elite football games, when the researchers compared the players' baseline sleep on ordinary training days with their sleep on game nights (36). Thus, the paradox is that the the need for recovery increases significantly after games in elite women's football, but sleep is found to be disturbed following game days (27, 33, 37–39).
Interestingly, extended sleep is found to have positive effects on athletes' performances (40, 41), and poor sleep impairs several aspects of physical and cognitive athletic performance, including increased risk of injuries (42). Therefore, methods and tools that can help the players to gain more effective sleep are therefore desirable in elite women's football (1, 17, 43).
A recent study found that Electro-Magnetic-Energy-Regulation therapy (BEMER) positively affected women's objectively measured sleep on game nights and nights associated to game nights (27). The players' total sleep time, time in bed, light sleep, and REM-sleep significantly increased after the introduction of BEMER therapy, and the players who spent more time with BEMER therapy compared to the players who spent less time, significantly increased their total sleep time, sleep efficiency, light sleep, light sleep, REM-sleep, and decreased their sleep onset latency and wakenings after sleep onset (27). The findings are explained by the possible restorative function BEMER has on recovery because of increased microcirculation.
BEMER therapy uses a Pulsed Electromagnetic Field (PEMF) to influence human recovery through a physical vascular therapy (44–47). The PEMF therapy is found to affect the blood flow in capillaries (arterioles and venules) which is defined as vasomotion (48, 49). The microcirculation of the body is the transportation of blood in the smallest blood vessels such as capillaries, arterioles and venules, which enable the blood flow through a contraction-extraction system within the tissue in the blood vessel walls (27). BEMER therapy sends a low intensity pulsed electromagnetic field into the body in order to stimulate the contraction-extraction frequency that regulates the local blood flow. The microcirculation system is crucial in the restoration and recovery of the cells in the body (50, 51). It is the microcirculation that enables the blood cells to deliver both oxygen and nutrition to organs and cells in the body, remove waste materials (such as carbon dioxide) from organs and metabolism, a process needed to rebuild the cells after extraordinary loads (52, 53). Interestingly, when the body is exposed to substantial stress loads, vasomotion is found to be hampered (54). Thus, tools that can affect vasomotion effectively might be beneficial for recovery in athletes (55–57). While BEMER therapy was found to affect objectively measured sleep on game nights and nights related to football games among female elite players, there is no such findings from BEMER therapy on subjective reported sleep to the authors knowledge (27). Despite the known importance of sleep for athletic performance, there is limited research on effective interventions to enhance sleep duration and sleep quality among elite women's football players. The current study therefore aims to investigate if women's elite football players subjective measured sleep duration and sleep quality are affected by BEMER therapy.
The following hypothesis were developed:
H1 BEMER therapy is affecting the elite women's football player’s sleep duration and sleep quality on game nights and the nights following game days.
2 Method
2.1 Participants
The current study is one of several studies based on a data collection in a Norwegian top series team in women's football (27). The team was selected and invited to participate in the current study based on their cooperation with the Olympic Sport center in middle Norway. The Olympic Sport center works with elite coaches, elite athletes and elite teams, to help them become international elite athletes. The coaching staff were first informed about the research project, where the aim of the study was explained and discussed in detail. The coaching staff agreed to participate based on their belief that the intervention might affect the recovery of the players. The team of 25 players were then informed about the project and the players who agreed to participate were instructed to sign a consent form approved by the local Regional Committee for Medical and Health Research Ethics (REC) in Central Norway (project ID 2017/2072/REK midt). Out of the team of 25 players, twenty-one football players (mean age 23.68 ± 2.8, range 20–29 years) signed the consent form and agreed to participate in the current study.
2.2 Procedure
Once the players were enrolled in the study the players were instructed about the data collection process and timeline. For the current study data were collected by day-to-day reports from the players of their subjective sleep. The data collection of day-to-day reports was reported by a smart phone application, PM Reporter Pro sport logging system (58), and the collection started on the 1st of February and lasted until the 31st of October the same year. The current study was designed as a quasi-experiment, where each player was their own control based on a control period compared with an intervention period. The first period of the study, from the 1st of February until the 30th of April, was the control period (Exp1) where the players completed their normal routines with trainings, games, and normsl recovery, but no use of BEMER therapy. The period from 1st of May until 31st of May was the period where the players were introduced for the intervention and got familiarized with the BEMER therapy device (Exp2). The intervention included BEMER therapy each morning and evening, and after high intensity trainings and games. The period from 1st of June until the 31st of October was the experiment period. However, because of extraordinary loads due to qualifying games for the Champions League and play offs in the Norwegian national cup in October, this period was divided into two periods; from 1st of June until the 30th of September (Exp3) where players completed training and games that were comparable with the control period (Exp1), and from the 1st until the 31st of October (Exp4) where players were exposed to extraordinary loads that were not comparable with the control period.
2.3 Instruments
The day-to-day data collection of subjective sleep was collected by using a smartphone application, PM Reporter Pro, which is a part of the PMSys online sports logging system (58). The application scheduled for push messages to remind the participants to report data every morning on a daily basis.
2.3.1 Subjective sleep
Subjective sleep duration and sleep quality were reported by the players in the morning and the following variables were obtained from the online sport logging system; Subjective sleep duration (SSH, “How much did you sleep last night?” hours and ½ hours), and Sleep quality (SLQ, “How well did you sleep?” 1 = insomnia, 5 = excellent sleep).
2.3.2 Subjective effects
The players also completed a questionnaire that registered their subjective experience of possible effects from the BEMER therapy. The soccer players were asked to consider 3 questions and how satisfied they were with their experienced effect on their restitution (Subjective restitution-SRC), their sleep (Subjective sleep-SSL), and their experienced effect on their experienced muscle sourness (Subjective muscle sourness-SMC), on a 7-point scale ranging from 1 (not at all satisfied) to 7 (extremely satisfied).
2.3.3 BEMER therapy
Bio-Electro-Magnetic-Energy-Regulation (BEMER) uses a pulsed electromagnetic field (PEMF) to deliver a patented bio-rhythmically therapeutic signal during the therapy. Each of the players in the current study were equipped with a BEMER Essential-Set that they had at home at their residence. The set contains a BEMER Box Professional control unit, where the football players administrate the different therapy programs that were used during the intervention, the BEMER Body applicator for full-body treatment, and the BEMER Pad applicator for local body treatment. The BEMER Box Professional control unit calculates the usages in minutes and hours each therapy program was used by the players to detect the total amount of minutes and hours each soccer player used BEMER therapy during the intervention period. The BEMER therapy was conducted by using the BEMER Body applicator (a mattress for a full body treatment) and a BEMER Pad applicator (a belt for local treatment).
2.3.4 The intervention protocol
From the 1st of May the players were instructed to use the BEMER base program on a day-to-day basis for 8 min in the morning and 8 min in the evening (27). All players had their own BEMER set. The intensity was set to 1 the first week and increased with one intensity for each week for the first 6 weeks. Then the intensity was set back to 3 and increased with one each week until they reached intensity 6, and then back to intensity 3 again. This routine was followed throughout the rest of the intervention period. The players were also instructed to use the BEMER therapy program after high intensity training session and games. Level 2 was used for the first two weeks followed by level 3 the next weeks throughout the intervention period. The BEMER Special mode program was introduced to the players after finishing 8 weeks with BEMER therapy treatment. The BEMER Special mode program starts treatment 2 h before players' awakenings, and was used once the first week, twice the second and up to three times a week throughout the intervention period.
2.4 Statistical analyses
Demographics and descriptive statistical analyses were conducted initially with IBM SPSS (version 27.0) and results were presented as means and ± standard deviations (S.D.). The days/nights in the data collection period were classified as training day/night (TN) if the players completed an ordinary training session that day, and that the day/night was not close to a football game. Days/nights that were close to a football game were classified as night before game (NBG) if the night was the night before a football game, game night (GN) if the night was the night following the day of the football game, game night plus 1 (GN1) if the night was the night one night following game night, and game night plus 2 (GN2) if the night was two nights following the game night. Each date of the night associates to the date of the day where the need for recovery and sleep are developed. Thus, the date of training or game day equals the date of sleep night, regardless of if sleep starts before or after midnight. Dates of days/nights without observations were omitted for further analyses.
The players' means of general training days/nights (TN) were calculated as their baseline values in each period of the experiment (Exp1, Exp2, Exp3 and Exp4), and their values on nights close to football games (NBG, GN, GN1 and GN2) were used to calculate possible differences to their baseline values in each period of the experiment. The period in the experiment where the players experienced extraordinary loads that were not comparable with the control period (Exp4), there were occasions of successive games with only one day between and significant data loss. Data from this period was therefore omitted from further analyses.
The different classified types of nights were classified within each of the periods in the experiment (Exp1, Exp2, Exp3 and Exp4). Accordingly, the players in the experiment completed BEMER therapy treatment in various degree, and the real time each player completed therapy treatment was collected from their BEMER Box Professional control units at the end of the experiment (after 31st of October). The actual time the players were exposed to BEMER therapy treatment was defined as BEMER Time (BMT). For further analyses the types of nights were categorized as the variable Type, the different periods in the experiment, control period (Exp1) and experiment periods (Exp2, Exp3 and Exp4) were categorized as the variable Exp.
The subjective sleep data (SSH and SLQ) and the category variable Exp was analyzed as three-ways factorial design by univariate analysis of variance ANOVA with False Discovery Rate adjusted p-values (59) and by multivariate analysis of variance using FFMANOVA (60, 61). The two category variables and the two-ways interactions between them were used as design variables in the analyses. The analysis was performed in R version 4.2.1 using the FFMANOVA R package (https://cran.r-project.org/package=ffmanova) (62).
3 Results
The football players participated in the experiment over 273 days, resulting in a total potential of collecting 6,006 data points including subjective sleep duration and subjective sleep quality. Of the 6,006 potential data points of perceived sleep data, 4,440 or 73.9% were collected. Data was lost due to the players' occasional forgetfulness, and due to the daily demands to report the soccer players' subjective sleep over such a long period, and that one of the soccer players was sold to another club in July.
Descriptive statistics (mean ± STD) of the studied sleep variables during the entire period of data collection including all soccer players, and during the night after a soccer night are shown in Table 1.
Table 1. Descriptive statistics for the subjective sleep patterns, based on the total period of 4,440 nights of data in 21 female football players, and the night after completing full soccer matches (252 nights), respectively.
The football players' subjective sleep measured by the PMSys online sport logging system showed that the mean SSH was 8 h and 7 min (±1:00) and their SLQ was 3.2 (±.74) in the control period (Exp1). In the experiment period the players' SSH was 8 h and 7 min (±01:01) and their SLQ was 3.18 (±.72). Table 2 shows the results from the MANOVA and ANOVA analyses investigating effects of type of days/nights (Type) and the control and experiment period (Exp).
Table 2. Multivariate and univariate ANOVA with false discovery rate adjusted p-values using FFMANOVA for validation of changes in subjective sleep variables on days close to football games (type) and the experimental periods (Exp) across all variables and within each variable.
For both subjective sleep variables (SSH and SLQ) there were significant main effects of type of night (Type) and significant main effects of experimental period (Exp). The interaction effect between type of night (Type) and experimental period (Exp) was not statistical significance.
Figure 1 shows the subjective sleep variables conducted in the current study, subjective sleep duration (SSH) and subjective sleep quality (SLQ). The data display each type of nights as a difference to the players' means of the ordinary training days (baseline) that were not close to a game, as calculated for each player within each experimental period. The baseline (0 on the y-axis) is means in the control period (Exp1) and experiment period (Exp3), and the graphs show their values on night before gameday, gameday, gameday +1, and gameday +2, compared to their baseline in the control period (EXP1) and experiment period (Exp3).
Figure 1. The subjective sleep data on days related to football games during the control period Exp1 (red) before BEMER, and the experiment period Exp3 (blue), the BEMER period. Subjective sleep duration (SSH, hours and ½ hours), Sleep quality (SLQ, 1 = insomnia, 5 = excellent sleep).
There are main effects on type of night, where SSH and SLQ are significantly higher on the nights before a game (NBG) than on game nights (GN) (Table 3 and Figure 1), and there are main effects of the players' SSH and SLQ scores over the experiment periods (Exp1 and Exp3), where SSH is higher on game nights (GN) and the nights following game nights in the experiment period (Exp3) compared with the control period (Exp1). The SLQ is higher on all days related to football games in the experiment period (Exp3) compared with the control period (Exp1). The SSH and SLQ scores are also above the players' baselines on all nights related to football games in the experiment period (Exp3), whereas the variables are below the players' baselines in the control period (Exp1) on game nights (GN) and the nights following game nights (GN1 and GN2).
Table 3. The means, standard deviation, maximum and minimum values of the use of BEMER (BMT) and their subjective experience of possible experienced effects from the BEMER therapy on SRC, SSL, and SMC.
The soccer players subjective experience of possible experienced effects from the BEMER therapy on their restitution (Subjective restitution-SRC), their sleep (Subjective sleep-SSL), and their experienced effect on their muscle soreness (Subjective muscle soreness-SMC), after completing the study are presented in Table 3.
Table 3 shows that the soccer players used BEMER therapy for 595.7 h on average during the experiment period, and that their subjective experienced effect of BEMER therapy on their restitution (SRC), their sleep (SSL), and their experienced effect on their muscle soreness (SMC), respectively were 4.48, 4.24, and 4.29.
4 Discussion
The aim of the current study was to investigate if Bio-Electro-Magnetic-Energy-Regulation (BEMER) therapy affects subjective sleep among elite players in Norwegian womeńs elite football. The hypothesis of the current study predicted that BEMER therapy would affect the players' subjective sleep on game nights and the nights following game days. The hypothesis was confirmed as the collected subjective data and the analyses show that subjective sleep duration and subjective sleep quality significantly improved in the experiment period compared to the control period.
4.1 Subjective sleep is improved by BEMER therapy
The results in the current study found that subjective measured sleep duration and sleep quality decreases significantly on game nights in both the control- and the experiment period (Table 2 and Figure 1). The significant decrease in sleep status on game nights paradoxically occurs in a situation where the elite women's football players need effective recovery caused by the extraordinary loads from the game. The decrease in the players' sleep status when their recovery needs are raised, represents a sleep disturbance (33, 34). A possible explanation is that the sleep disturbance is caused by the extraordinary physical and psychological loads on game days, causing emotional arousals and physical symptoms related to inflammation processes caused by muscle ruptures (21, 29, 33, 34, 38, 63). Interestingly, the players' sleep status on days following football games is significantly below their baseline sleep status for at least 3 days after game days in the control period (Table 2 and Figure 1). Interestingly, the recovery time for football players to achieve metabolic homeostasis after football games is found to be until 72–96 h (31, 64). Thus, the results in the current study show that the players' sleep status is significantly below their baseline sleep status on nights related to football games before the introduction of BEMER therapy. Therefore, it is reason to believe that the players in the current study are not fully recovered in the days after football games in the control period (Table 2 and Figure 1).
After the introduction of BEMER therapy the players subjective sleep duration and sleep quality were significantly increased compared to the control period on game nights and the following two nights (Table 2 and Figure 1). Both the players' subjective sleep duration and sleep quality were above the players' baseline sleep status on general training days on both game nights and the following two nights. The results in the current study also show that the players subjective sleep duration improves every night in the nights following game nights after the introduction of BEMER therapy.
Accordingly, after the introduction of BEMER therapy the players' subjective sleep quality does not drop below their baseline sleep status on game nights and increases significantly on the second night after game night (Figure 1). Before the introduction of BEMER therapy the players sleep quality increased the two days following games, but from a score significantly below their baseline sleep status on general training days (Figure 1). Thus, it might be because the players needed to catch up their sleep on days following game nights to become fully recovered.
A potential explanation of the current results might be that the players' recovery has improved in the experiment period compared to the control period. BEMER therapy treatment is found to improve vasomotion (45, 46, 49), and when blood perfusion improves it results in improved performance recovery (50). The recovery improves because of increased nutrition and oxygen delivery to cells, and transportation of waste and carbon dioxide from metabolism away from the cells (53). The possible effect on the players' vasomotion might be the reason why BEMER influences the players ability to gain more normal sleep after extraordinary loads such as football games (27).
In contrast to other studies that detected no change or a decrease in athletes' sleep status pre-competitions (65), the results in the current study show that the elite women's football players' sleep status on the nights before football games are significantly above their baseline sleep status (Table 2 and Figure 1). The current results are valid for both the control- and experiment period. The results indicate that the players are aware of their need to gain optimal sleep before football games and take actions to be fully recovered and ready for the game.
The playerś subjective experiences of possible experienced effects from the BEMER therapy treatment at the end of the intervention also show that the players are well above average satisfied with their experienced effects on their restitution (SRC), their sleep (SSL), and on their muscle soreness (SMC).
The results in the current study are in line with the results in a recent study that investigated effects from BEMER therapy on objective detected sleep, which found that total sleep time and most sleep stages significantly increased (27). Thus, the results in the current study show that BEMER therapy improves the elite women's football players subjective sleep duration and sleep quality on game nights and the nights following game nights.
4.2 Conclusion, strengths and limitations
Sleep is key in the recovery process as it helps regenerate important psychological and physiological functions. Since sleep is found to be disturbed after football matches and intensive football sessions, BEMER therapy treatment may be an effective tool to improve the recovery process. Especially during international tournaments football players need tools that can improve their recovery (66). The current results are especially interesting since elite athletes normally have a well-developed microcirculation caused by the amount of aerobic training they have completed (67). The strengths of the current study are the high numbers of daily observations over an extensive period, the unique subjects who are elite level players, and the confirmation of the findings detected by the objective measurements that were used to detect sleep in the same data collection (27). The current study also has limitations that should be kept in mind. The number of participants in the current study could have been larger and a control group would have strengthened the study. The relative low number of participants and data loss might have influenced the power of the statistical analyses.
Data availability statement
The raw data supporting the conclusions of this article will be made available by the authors, without undue reservation.
Ethics statement
The studies involving humans were approved by Regional Committee for Medical and Health Research Ethics (REC) in Central Norway (project ID 2017/2072/REK midt). The studies were conducted in accordance with the local legislation and institutional requirements. The participants provided their written informed consent to participate in this study.
Author contributions
FM: Conceptualization, Data curation, Investigation, Methodology, Project administration, Supervision, Writing – original draft, Writing – review & editing. SP: Software, Writing – review & editing. EM: Formal Analysis, Writing – review & editing.
Funding
The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. This study was funded by the Department of Education and Lifelong learning, Norwegian University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway and Tromsø Research Foundation.
Acknowledgments
The players' and coaching staffs' participation, and the equipment delivered by Microhelse.as AS in Norway who provided each player in the team with a BEMER Essential-Set, are deeply appreciated.
Conflict of interest
The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
Publisher's note
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Keywords: sleep, elite football, recovery, physical load, BEMER therapy
Citation: Moen F, Pettersen SA and Mosleth EF (2024) The effect of electro-magnetic-energy-regulation therapy on subjective sleep among elite players in Norwegian women's football. Front. Sports Act. Living 6: 1343841. doi: 10.3389/fspor.2024.1343841
Received: 27 March 2024; Accepted: 18 July 2024;
Published: 1 August 2024.
Edited by:
Matthew J. Barnes, Massey University, New ZealandReviewed by:
Claire Badenhorst, Massey University, New ZealandKaruppasamy Govindasamy, SRM Institute of Science and Technology, India
© 2024 Moen, Pettersen and Mosleth. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
*Correspondence: Frode Moen, frode.moen@ntnu.no