In Thailand, overtraining Syndrome is managed by sports medicines. Overtraining syndrome (OTS) is a maladaptive response to chronic training and life stress without adequate recovery, defined by long-term performance decrement (weeks to months) accompanied by mood, sleep, immune, and endocrine disturbance. The ECSS/ACSM joint consensus places it at the far end of a continuum that begins with functional overreaching (FOR, full recovery in days), progresses through non-functional overreaching (NFOR, recovery in weeks to months), and ends in OTS, defined when underperformance persists beyond 8 weeks despite adequate rest.
Overtraining syndrome (no dedicated ICD-10 code; often captured under R53.83 Other fatigue or under specific symptom codes) is the chronic-fatigue end of a training-stress continuum. The ECSS/ACSM 2013 consensus defines it as long-term decrement in sport-specific performance (weeks to months) with associated maladaptive physiological and psychological changes that do not resolve with the customary 2-week recovery period required for functional overreaching. The underlying mechanism is incompletely understood but converges on chronic dysregulation of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis, autonomic imbalance with parasympathetic dominance at rest and impaired sympathetic responsiveness to exercise, glycogen and amino-acid depletion, systemic low-grade inflammation, and a maladaptive central-fatigue response. Concomitant low energy availability (LEA) and Relative Energy Deficiency in Sport (REDs, IOC 2023) overlap with OTS but represent a distinct, energy-driven syndrome that should be screened in every case.
The key symptoms of Overtraining Syndrome are: Persistent decline in sport-specific performance lasting more than 2 months despite adequate rest, often with longer time-to-exhaustion and reduced maximal power output., Disproportionate fatigue during normal training that previously felt easy, with prolonged recovery between sessions., Insomnia or non-restorative sleep despite exhaustion, frequent night waking, and unrefreshing morning routines., Low mood, irritability, anxiety, and loss of motivation; some athletes describe a flat affect or anhedonia., Reduced maximal exercise heart rate (5-10 beats/min lower than baseline) and a slower heart-rate recovery despite preserved or low resting heart rate., Recurrent upper-respiratory infections, slow wound healing, and persistent low-grade inflammatory symptoms (sore throat, swollen glands)., Loss of libido, menstrual irregularities or amenorrhea in women, and morning erections lost in men..
OTS is a clinical diagnosis of exclusion that requires a structured workup. The clinician begins with a detailed training history (volume, intensity distribution, monotony, training peaks, competition schedule), life stress, sleep, energy intake, and prior episodes. Symptom screening uses validated tools: the Profile of Mood States (POMS), Daily Analysis of Life Demands for Athletes (DALDA), Recovery-Stress Questionnaire for Athletes (RESTQ-Sport), and OTS-specific symptom checklists. Resting heart rate, heart rate variability, and submaximal heart rate response to standardized exercise (e.g., 6-minute step test or fixed-effort cycling) are tracked across weeks. Laboratory exclusion is essential because OTS mimics many treatable diseases: full blood count and ferritin (iron deficiency, anemia), thyroid-stimulating hormone and free T4 (hypothyroidism), random and morning cortisol or 24-hour urinary free cortisol (adrenal insufficiency), testosterone in men and an FSH/LH/estradiol panel in women with menstrual disturbance, vitamin D, EBV/CMV serology if recent infection, fasting glucose and HbA1c, ESR/CRP, urea/creatinine/electrolytes, and creatine kinase. ECG and echocardiography exclude cardiac causes in athletes with palpitations, syncope, or chest pain. A specialized exercise test demonstrates a reduction in maximal heart rate, peak power, and lactate response. Final diagnosis requires symptoms and underperformance lasting more than 8 weeks despite adequate rest and exclusion of medical alternatives. Mood disorder, eating disorder, and chronic-fatigue syndrome remain key differentials that often coexist.
Outlook in OTS depends on duration of symptoms before diagnosis and on adherence to structured recovery. NFOR resolves within weeks to a few months in over 80% of athletes who deload promptly. True OTS requires 6-12 months on average and can last beyond 24 months when low energy availability, depression, or eating disorder coexists. Approximately 70-80% of athletes return to their pre-OTS level within 12-18 months when treatment is multidisciplinary, but a subset never regain previous performance. Early recognition — within 4-8 weeks of unexplained underperformance — is the strongest predictor of full recovery. Recurrence affects roughly 20-30% of athletes who return to training without addressing the original contributing factors.
Sports medicine referral is needed when unexplained underperformance persists more than 4 weeks despite a deload, when mood or sleep disturbance is severe, or when there is suspicion of low energy availability, eating disorder, or coexisting endocrine or cardiac pathology.
Find specialists →Stage 1 (complete rest): 2-4 weeks; symptoms begin to settle. Stage 2 (low-volume return): 4-12 weeks; subjective scores normalize and submaximal heart rate returns to baseline. Stage 3 (rebuilding training): 8-16 weeks; volume restored first, intensity later. Full return to pre-OTS performance: typically 6-12 months from diagnosis. Persistent symptoms beyond 18 months prompt reassessment for missed differentials including chronic fatigue syndrome or untreated mental-health disorder.
During Stage 1 of recovery, exercise is limited to easy non-impact activity (walking, light cycling) if tolerated, total under 30 minutes per day. Stage 2 reintroduces sport-specific activity at 20-40% of pre-OTS volume and intensity. Stage 3 builds volume first (over 4-8 weeks) and intensity later (over 4-8 weeks). Strength training is reintroduced at low load with technical focus.
Choose a sports medicine physician affiliated with a national governing body, professional team, or accredited high-performance center, working alongside an exercise physiologist, sports dietician, and sports psychologist. Avoid clinicians who recommend hormonal or stimulant therapies without complete workup.
Medically reviewed by AIHealz Medical Editorial Board · May 13, 2026
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