| Literature DB >> 24479464 |
Athanasios Chatzinikolaou1, Dimitrios Draganidis, Alexandra Avloniti, Alexandros Karipidis, Athanasios Z Jamurtas, Chrysanthi L Skevaki, Dimitrios Tsoukas, Apostolis Sovatzidis, Anastasios Theodorou, Antonis Kambas, Ioannis Papassotiriou, Kyriakos Taxildaris, Ioannis Fatouros.
Abstract
Basketball incorporates intense eccentric muscle activity that induces muscle microtrauma and an inflammatory response. This study investigated time-dependent inflammatory and performance responses during a weekly microcycle after a basketball match. Twenty elite-standard players underwent a trial that comprised a match followed by a 6-day simulated in-season microcycle. The trial was preceded by a control condition that did not have a match. Blood sampling and tests of maximal-intensity exercise performance and muscle damage occurred before each condition, immediately after the match and daily thereafter for 6 consecutive days. The match induced marked increases in heart rate, lactate, ammonia, glucose, non-esterified fatty acids and triglycerides. Performance deteriorated for 24-48 h after the match, whereas knee flexor and extensor soreness increased for 48 and 24 h post-match, respectively. Inflammatory (leukocytes, C-reactive protein, creatine kinase activity, adhesion molecules, cortisol, uric acid and cytokines) and oxidative stress (malondialdehyde, protein carbonyls, oxidised glutathione, antioxidant capacity, catalase and glutathione peroxidase) markers increased for ~24 h and subsided thereafter. Reduced glutathione declined for 24 h after exercise. These results suggest that a basketball match elicits moderate and relatively brief (~24-48 h) inflammatory responses, is associated with marked but short-lived performance deterioration, but is less stressful than other intermittent-type sports.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24479464 DOI: 10.1080/02640414.2013.865251
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Sports Sci ISSN: 0264-0414 Impact factor: 3.337