Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8628861 | Cytokine | 2018 | 7 Pages |
Abstract
This study examined the acute and chronic effects of euhydrated and hypohydrated heat exposure, on biomarkers of stress and inflammation. Eight trained males [mean (SD) age: 21 (3) y; mass: 77.30 (4.88)â¯kg; VÌO2max: 56.9 (7.2)â¯mLâ¯kgâ1â¯minâ1] undertook two heat acclimation programmes (balanced cross-over design), once drinking to maintain euhydration and once with restricted fluid-intake (permissive dehydration). Days 1, 6, and 11 were 60â¯min euhydrated exercise-heat stress tests (40â¯Â°C; 50% RH, 35% peak power output), days 2-5 and 7-10 were 90â¯min, isothermal-strain (target rectal temperature: 38.5â¯Â°C) exercise-heat sessions. Plasma was obtained pre- and post- exercise on day 1, 2, and 11 and analysed for cortisol, interleukin-6 (IL-6), and C-reactive protein (CRP). Cortisol and CRP were also assessed on day 6. IL-6 was elevated following the initial (acute) 90â¯min isothermal heat strain exercise-heat exposure (day 2) with permissive dehydration ((pre exercise: 1.0â¯pgâ¯mLâ1 [0.9], post-exercise: 1.8â¯pgâ¯mLâ1 [1.0], Pâ¯=â¯.032) and when euhydrated (pre-exercise: 1.0â¯pgâ¯mLâ1 [1.4], post-exercise: 1.6â¯pgâ¯mLâ1 [2.1], Pâ¯=â¯.048). Plasma cortisol levels were also elevated but only during permissive dehydration (Pâ¯=â¯.032). Body mass loss was strongly correlated with Îcortisol (râ¯=â¯â0.688, Pâ¯=â¯.003). Although there was a trend for post-exercise cortisol to be decreased following both heat acclimation programmes (chronic effects), there were no within or between intervention differences in IL-6 or CRP. In conclusion, acute exercise in the heat increased IL-6 and cortisol only when fluid-intake is restricted. There were no chronic effects of either intervention on biomarkers of inflammation as evidenced by IL-6 and CRP returning to basal level at the end of heat acclimation.
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Authors
Joseph T. Costello, Rebecca A. Rendell, Matthew Furber, Heather C. Massey, Michael J. Tipton, John S. Young, Jo Corbett,