Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Boxing is an intermittent combat sport that requires repeated high-intensity actions, sustained punching output, and rapid post-exercise recovery. This single-arm field-based study will examine the effects of a nine-session high-intensity intermittent training program on sport-specific punching output, heart-rate responses, and accelerometer-derived movement responses in youth amateur boxers. Participants will complete a standardized boxing-specific test before and after the intervention. The primary outcome will be the total number of punches completed during the test. Secondary outcomes will include round-by-round punching output, heart rate immediately after the test, heart rate one minute after the test, one-minute heart-rate recovery, and the accelerometer-derived sum of absolute acceleration peaks recorded during each round. The study is designed to provide ecologically valid evidence on feasible monitoring strategies for training adaptation in amateur boxing.
Full description
This study is a field-based, single-arm pre-post intervention conducted in youth amateur boxers. The intervention consists of nine sessions of high-intensity intermittent training integrated into the athletes' regular boxing preparation. The training approach is designed to reflect the intermittent physiological and technical demands of boxing, emphasizing repeated high-intensity efforts, incomplete recovery, and sport-specific execution under fatigue.
Before and after the intervention, participants will perform a standardized boxing-specific test composed of repeated 30-second punching rounds separated by recovery periods. Punching output will be recorded as the number of completed punches per round and as the total number of punches across the test. Heart rate will be measured immediately after the test and again one minute after completion to characterize acute cardiovascular response and early recovery. In addition, smartphone accelerometry using Phyphox will be used as an exploratory secondary monitoring strategy. Accelerometer data will be processed using the absolute acceleration signal, and local acceleration peaks will be identified within each active round using a predefined operational criterion.
The primary purpose of the study is to evaluate whether a short high-intensity intermittent boxing-specific training block is associated with changes in sport-specific punching output. Secondary objectives are to describe changes in post-test heart-rate response, one-minute heart-rate recovery, and accelerometer-derived indicators of movement intensity. Given the applied training context and the expected small sample, the study will be interpreted as exploratory and field-based rather than as a definitive efficacy trial.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
9 participants in 1 patient group
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal