PAPE and MI have been shown to be effective strategies during warm-up routines to increase athletic and cognitive performance (Rumeau et al., 2023). Accordingly, the present study aimed to investigate the acute effects of a warm-up combining both PAPE and MI in different orders. The main findings were as follows: 1) PAPE-MI and MI-PAPE induced significant improvements in muscular force and repeated muscular force capacities, handgrip strength, reaction time and repeated sprint capacities, as compared to either PAPE or MI alone, 2) no significant difference was obtained between PAPE-MI and MI-PAPE, 3) PAPE-MI or MI-PAPE did not alter subjective fatigue ratings (NASA-TLX) as compared to CONTROL conditions (MI and PAPE alone) after the different warm-up strategies. These results support our hypotheses that the combination of PAPE and MI was more effective than PAPE or MI alone in enhancing the effects of a traditional warm-up without causing additional subjective fatigue. Contrary to our hypothesis, the order of PAPE and MI had no effect on the subsequent performance improvement. PAPE procedures have already been shown to be beneficial in increasing maximal muscle strength and the overall muscle function (Petisco et al., 2019; Gilmore et al., 2019; Rumeau et al., 2023). It is of particular interest in elite athletes (as in our study) who are more likely positive responders to PAPE for their specific skills (Boullosa, 2021). Whether it was with submaximal and maximal half-squats (Petisco et al., 2019), half-squats followed by vertical jumps,(Lagrange et al., 2020) maximal concentric knee extensions (Rumeau et al., 2023), conditioning activities (Petisco et al., 2019; Lagrange et al., 2020) or bodyweight plyometric exercises (Turner et al., 2015), the results are positive for the performance of the neuromuscular system. With a near-maximal muscle activation, the type of exercise does not seem to have a significant effect on the subsequent increase in muscle performance as also shown following eccentric overload or weightlifting exercises (Beato et al., 2019). PAPE is a long-lasting phenomenon with potential positive effects between 5 and 30 minutes after the conditioning exercise (Kilduff et al., 2008; Gouvêa et al., 2013). The greater effects are expected between 5 and 10 minutes after the conditioning contractions (Blazevich and Babault, 2019). Authors have often concluded that a recovery period should be programmed to alleviate the likely fatigue originating from the preceding maximal contractions (Mola et al., 2014; Turner et al., 2015). For example, Gilmore et al. observed an increased bat speed in experienced female softball players 6 minutes after a high-intensity isometric preconditioning of upper limb muscles involved in bat swing (Gilmore et al., 2019). MI, which involves neural activity without any contractions, has also been shown to be effective in improving agility and sprint performance when used acutely (Hammoudi-Nassib et al., 2014; Rumeau et al., 2023), and muscle strength, power and endurance-type efforts when used chronically (McCormick et al., 2015; Tod et al., 2015; Slimani et al., 2016). MI primarily increases the neural circuitry normally activated during actual movement (Grosprêtre et al., 2019) and acutely increases the excitability of a large part of the cortico-spinal pathway (Grosprêtre et al., 2016). These effects can persist for at least 10 minutes after the end of MI (Grosprêtre et al., 2019). MI results in activation of motor regions of the brain (Munzert and Zentgraf, 2009), especially when participants have a high level of expertise in sports performance, i.e., when they are elite athletes (Guillot et al., 2013), as the participants under investigation here. Recently, it has been shown that MI can have acute effects on force performance, mainly by inducing a more efficient cortical drive to motor units to optimize agonist/antagonist coactivation (Dos Anjos et al., 2022). However, the activation of the motor neural system still remains weaker than during voluntary contraction (Ehrsson et al., 2003), MI being potentially an intermediate state of activation between rest and voluntary contraction (Bouguetoch et al., 2020). According to these effects, the present study applied a combination of PAPE and MI, which could exacerbate the expected performance improvements by combining their complementary actions on the neuromuscular system. Our results showed that the combination of PAPE and MI was more effective than our control conditions applying PAPE or MI alone for repeated sprint capacities, force capacities and repeated force capacities. The effectiveness of a warm-up can be explained by several parameters, namely a difference in cellular water content, a difference in muscle temperature and a difference in muscle activation (Blazevich and Babault, 2019). The results of our study were probably due to this last parameter, greater muscle activation. In fact, whether the warm-up included PAPE or MI, some neuromuscular changes have been suggested after warm-up as evidenced by an increase in electromyographic activity (Grosprêtre et al., 2019; Babault et al., 2022), suggesting an optimised neuromuscular state for subsequent muscular contractions. Authors have suggested that warm-up exercises could exacerbate the neural adaptations (Babault et al., 2022) and would produce an additional recruitment facilitation that would improve movement quality and subsequent muscular contractions (Parr et al., 2017). Combining the two conditions, PAPE and MI, during a warm-up could exacerbate this phenomenon, leading to further improvements in maximal or repeated force production, and repeated sprint capacity. Additional neuromuscular measurements including electromyographic activity should therefore be conducted to confirm such a hypothesis. Furthermore, the combination of the PAPE and MI was more effective to increase reaction time as compared to control conditions applying PAPE or MI alone. As a reminder, reaction time tasks were involved during mental imagery via the boxing task. Therefore, improvements in this task were expected after all MI conditions, due to the specificity of mental imagery (Grosprêtre et al., 2016). In contrast, the effects of MI alone did not differ from PAPE alone, both in a lesser extent than both combinations of PAPE and MI. Such a discrepancy could be attributed to neural activation. Indeed, as mentioned above, the warm-up produced an optimised neuromuscular state that could emphasize subsequent improvements for example during tasks with high attentional and neural activation such as during a reaction time task. Therefore, a summation effect is hypothesized after the combination of PAPE and MI, which could exacerbate the likely corticospinal adaptations. Indeed, there are several clues from fundamental previous works that the combination of actual movements and motor imagery might produce a larger activation of the neuromuscular system as compared to MI alone (Grosprêtre et al., 2016). Therefore, combining MI and voluntary contraction at a high level of force might produce an even greater activation in fine, notably by enhancing the excitability of structures along the neuromuscular system. For instance, the spinal neuronal network might particularly beneficiate from combining MI and PAPE, in which an increase of excitability lead to a better recruitment of motor units. Indeed, both MI (Grosprêtre et al., 2019) and PAPE (Blazevich and Babault, 2019) seems to acutely increase the excitability of such networks. The combination of both modalities might then lead to a cumulative effect at a neural level. Contrary to our a priori hypothesis, there was no effect of the order in which PAPE and MI were performed. This finding is surprizing while considering that PAPE often requires a recovery to alleviate possible neuromuscular fatigue. PAPE performed first should have produced greater improvements. This apparent contradiction could first be explained by the muscle groups involved in PAPE. In fact, while PAPE was focused on the thigh muscles, the post-tests were mostly related to the upper body during the boxing and handgrip tests. It is therefore unlikely that PAPE would have caused detrimental fatigue during these tests. A second explanation could arise from the constant order of post-tests. The RSA was always conducted after the boxing and handgrip tests. The duration of these tests may have permitted partial recovery from the PAPE procedure. Finally, the volunteers involved (elite boxers) in combination with the PAPE procedure could also explain the lack of order effect. Indeed, during competition, boxers are required to maintain high impact punches despite an increased fatigue. This high muscle endurance (exacerbated by the competitive level of our participants) could have implied a reduced fatigue or accelerated recovery after the PAPE procedure. Finally, it is also possible that MI-PAPE and PAPE-MI lead to different underlying mechanisms that compensate each other and lead to similar effects. Indeed, regarding MI-PAPE order, as MI might lead to an increase in the excitability of the neuromuscular system that can last at least up to 10 minutes after the intervention (Grosprêtre et al., 2019), it might positively exacerbate the effect of the following conditioning contraction of the PAPE condition. Conversely, in the PAPE-MI, if MI is performed after the strong conditioning contraction in the time-windows of the PAPE effect, it might also beneficiate from the conditioning effects of PAPE at a neural level (Blazevich and Babault, 2019). Finally, all four experimental procedures showed similar results in light with the NASA-TLX score. These results confirmed previous observations (Rozand et al., 2014; Rumeau et al., 2023). For example, the authors have previously shown that real contractions added to imagined contractions did not generate additional neuromuscular fatigue (Rozand et al., 2014). The practitioners could therefore propose to add these different strategies within a comprehensive warm-up routine without any mental or physiological adverse effects. In addition, some limitations should be acknowledged. The constant order of the assessments may influence our results. Control conditions included some seated rest before PAPE or MI. This short inactivity could favour a cooling down (Kapnia et al., 2023) that could reduce our PAPE effect. One should note that MI was also conducted while volunteers were inactive, and that MI followed by PAPE produced larger effect that rest followed by PAPE. Accordingly, although we cannot exclude this potential cooling down, the effect of combining both procedures remain more beneficial than both PAPE and MI alone. In addition, a larger sample size could be of interest. However, the present study focused on elite boxer (French national team). The small size of this population makes it difficult to add other individuals. In addition, although post-hoc effect sizes were small, this could have a large impact in international competitions. Finally, although the boxing model was used here, our conclusions could be generalized to other populations of high-level athletes. Indeed, similar results for PAPE or MI alone have previously been reported in the literature for other sports (Lagrange et al., 2020; Rumeau et al., 2023). Obviously, the procedure of PAPE and MI must be adapted to the sport performed (Boullosa, 2021). For example, there are several types of MI (e.g., visual or kinaesthetic) that could specifically interfere with subsequent performance (Fontani et al., 2007). However, the main recommendation is to use tasks related to the subsequent sporting event, as MI is task-dependent (Rumeau et al., 2023). However, exploring these different parameters in other populations requires further experiments. |