OBJECTIVE: To investigate the impact of 30-minute walking exercise at 70% VO2max on tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) Ag and plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1) Ag in obese sedentary males. RESEARCH METHODS AND PROCEDURES: A controlled observational study of the effect of a 30-minute acute exercise bout at 70% VO2max on plasma t-PA antigen and PAI-1 antigen in 10 obese sedentary males matched for age, ethnic origin, and smoking status with 10 nonobese sedentary male controls. RESULTS: The obese group remained hypofibrinolytic compared with the nonobese group at all time-points before, during, and after exercise. t-PA increased in both groups with exercise before returning to baseline values 30 minutes after exercise. PAI-1 did not significantly change in either group with exercise but rose significantly 30 minutes after exercise in the obese group. DISCUSSION: The reduction in fibrinolytic potential in the obese group represents an increase in acute thrombotic risk and could account for the increased incidence of exercise-associated myocardial infarction observed in sedentary obese groups.
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the impact of 30-minute walking exercise at 70% VO2max on tissue plasminogen activator (t-PA) Ag and plasminogen activator inhibitor type 1 (PAI-1) Ag in obese sedentary males. RESEARCH METHODS AND PROCEDURES: A controlled observational study of the effect of a 30-minute acute exercise bout at 70% VO2max on plasma t-PA antigen and PAI-1 antigen in 10 obese sedentary males matched for age, ethnic origin, and smoking status with 10 nonobese sedentary male controls. RESULTS: The obese group remained hypofibrinolytic compared with the nonobese group at all time-points before, during, and after exercise. t-PA increased in both groups with exercise before returning to baseline values 30 minutes after exercise. PAI-1 did not significantly change in either group with exercise but rose significantly 30 minutes after exercise in the obese group. DISCUSSION: The reduction in fibrinolytic potential in the obese group represents an increase in acute thrombotic risk and could account for the increased incidence of exercise-associated myocardial infarction observed in sedentary obese groups.
Authors: Emma Kate Zadow; Daniel William Taylor Wundersitz; Diane Louise Hughes; Murray John Adams; Michael Ian Charles Kingsley; Hilary Anne Blacklock; Sam Shi Xuan Wu; Amanda Clare Benson; Frédéric Dutheil; Brett Ashley Gordon Journal: Semin Thromb Hemost Date: 2020-09-03 Impact factor: 4.180