| Literature DB >> 24511348 |
Wanda Pilch1, Ilona Pokora2, Zbigniew Szyguła1, Tomasz Pałka1, Paweł Pilch3, Tomasz Cisoń1, Lesław Malik3, Szczepan Wiecha4.
Abstract
The aim of the present study was to investigate the effect of Finnish sauna bathing on a white blood cell profile, cortisol levels and selected physiological indices in athletes and non-athletes. The study evaluated 9 trained middle-distance runners and 9 male non-athletes. The subjects from both groups participated in 15-minute sauna sessions until their core temperature rose by 1.2°C (mean temperature in the sauna room was 96° ± 2°C; relative humidity was 15 ± 3%) with a 2 minute cool down with water at a temperature of 19-20°C. Body mass was measured before and after the session and blood samples were taken for tests. Rectal temperature was monitored at five-minute intervals during the whole session. Serum total protein, haematological indices and cortisol levels were determined. Sauna bathing caused higher body mass loss and plasma volume in the athletes compared to the group of non-athletes. After the sauna session, an increased number of white blood cells, lymphocyte, neutrophil and basophil counts was reported in the white blood cell profile. Higher increments in leukocyte and monocyte after the sauna bathing session were recorded in the group of athletes compared to untrained subjects. The obtained results indicated that sauna bathing stimulated the immune system to a higher degree in the group of athletes compared to the untrained subjects.Entities:
Keywords: cortisol; immunology; sauna bath; white blood cell profile
Year: 2013 PMID: 24511348 PMCID: PMC3916915 DOI: 10.2478/hukin-2013-0075
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hum Kinet ISSN: 1640-5544 Impact factor: 2.193
A general profile of the group of athletes/T/and non-athletes/N/
| Age (years) | Height (cm) | Body mass (kg) | BMI (kg/m2) | Fat (%) | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Athletes /T/ | 21.6 | 179 | 67.7[ | 21.16 | 7.06[ | |
| 0.52 | 7.0 | 5.19 | 1.16 | 1.54 | ||
| Non-athletes /N/ | 21.7 | 176.4 | 73.43 | 23.55 | 10.22 | |
| 0.48 | 5.44 | 6.98 | 1.92 | 2.23 |
Significant differences between the groups T/N at the level of p<0.05
Mean time of sauna bath and differences in rectal temperature in men from the group of athletes (T) and non-athletes (N)
| Total duration of the sauna session (minutes) | Rectal temperature (°C)
| |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Before | After | |||
| Athletes /T/ | 33.8 | 37.01 | 38.21 | |
| 9.3 | 0.32 | 0.32 | ||
| Non-athletes /N/ | 30.6 | 37.21 | 38.41 | |
| 9.4 | 0.37 | 0.36 | ||
Body mass before and after a sauna session in athletes and non-athletes
| Body mass [kg]
| ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| %BM | ||||
| Athletes /T/ | Before | 68.2 | - | |
| After | 67.3 | - | ||
| Δ | −0.95 | (−)1.43%[ | ||
| Non-athletes /N/ | Before | 73 | - | |
| After | 72.4 | - | ||
| Δ | −0.64 | (−)0.9%[ | ||
Significant differences between the groups T/N at p<0.05
Changes in plasma volume (PV) in both groups studied after a sauna session
| Δ % PV
| ||
|---|---|---|
| Athletes /T/ | −10.2* | 3.29 |
| Non-athletes /N/ | −7.0 | 3.30 |
Changes in white blood cell profile and cortisol levels in the men studied
| Index | Athletes /T/ | Non-athletes /N/ | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||||
| Before | After | Δ | Before | After | Δ | |
| WBC [103/μl] | 4.60[ | 5.25[ | 0.65[ | 5.24±1.37 | 5.63±1.10 | 0.39±0.69 |
| Neutrophils [103/μl] | 2.63±0.57 | 3.16[ | 0.53±0.63 | 2.78±0.81 | 3.12±0.85 | 0.34±0.49 |
| Lymphocytes [103/μl] | 1.36±0.26 | 1.49[ | 0.13±0.16 | 1.82±0.46 | 1.89±0.34 | 0.07±0.33 |
| Monocytes [103/μl] | 0.40±0.11 | 0.41±0.11 | 0.01[ | 0.46±0.18 | 0.46±0.15 | 0.00±0.08 |
| Basophils [103/μl] | 0.02±0.01 | 0.03[ | 0.01±0.01 | 0.02±0.01 | 0.02±0.01 | 0.00±0.01 |
| Eosinophils [103/μl] | 0.18±0.17 | 0.16[ | −0.03±0.03 | 0.16±0.07 | 0.15±0.06 | −0.01±0.04 |
| Cortisol (ng·ml−1) | 10.99±2.02 | 15.45[ | 4.46[ | 13.11±6.77 | 18.7[ | 5.59±5.89 |
Statistically significant differences at p<0.05 compared to the levels before sauna bathing
Statistically significant differences at p<0.05 compared to the group N.