| Literature DB >> 24669232 |
Eri Koibuchi1, Yoshio Suzuki1.
Abstract
The secretion of salivary α-amylase is influenced by adrenergic regulation of the sympathetic nervous system and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis; thus, exercise affects the levels of salivary α-amylase. Granger et al published a review in 2007 that focused attention on salivary α-amylase. In addition, a portable system for monitoring salivary α-amylase activity was launched in Japan at the end of 2005. The correlation between exercise and salivary α-amylase has since been extensively investigated. The present review summarizes relevant studies published in the English and Japanese literature after 2006. A search of the PubMed and CiNii databases identified 54 articles, from which 15 original articles were selected. The findings described in these publications indicate that exercise consistently increases mean salivary α-amylase activities and concentrations, particularly at an intensity of >70% VO2max in healthy young individuals. Thus, these studies have confirmed that salivary α-amylase levels markedly increase in response to physical stress. Salivary α-amylase levels may therefore serve as an effective indicator in the non-invasive assessment of physical stress.Entities:
Keywords: adrenergic; athlete; physical stress; sympathetic nervous system
Year: 2014 PMID: 24669232 PMCID: PMC3961115 DOI: 10.3892/etm.2014.1497
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Exp Ther Med ISSN: 1792-0981 Impact factor: 2.447
Figure 1Flow diagram of the literature search and process for selecting original studies that demonstrated a correlation between salivary α-amylase levels and exercise in healthy humans.
Parameters of primary studies.
| Subjects | Exercise | Changes in salivary α-amylase | Trend of change in salivary α-amylase | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Endurance-trained males (n=11); age, 23±1 years | Bicycle ergometer | Pre- vs. 45 min following exercise and post-exercise: 441±81 vs. 1279±248 and 1441±262 U/ml | Increase | |
| Healthy males (n=10); age, 23±1 years | Bicycle ergometer | α-amylase activity, mean ± SEM (U/ml): | Increase | |
| Trained male volunteers with cycling as primary sport (n=24); age, 23±5 years | Bicycle ergometer | Pre- vs. post-exercise (to exhaustion), 143±23 vs. 463±22 U/ml | Increase | |
| Healthy males (n=9), healthy females (n=4); age, 24±5 years | Bicycle ergometer | Exercise tended to increase mean salivary α-amylase activity (NS). Dehydration decreased secretion rate but, did not influence salivary α-amylase activity | No change | |
| Healthy endurance-trained males (n=6); age, 21.8±1.9 years | Treadmill running | Pre- vs. post-exercise, 115±27 vs. 180±29 U/ml | Increase | |
| Elite male wheelchair athletes (n=23); mean age, 27 years | Treadmill, constant load: 60% VO2peak (30 min × 2) | Increased following exercise under constant load and intermittent trial | Increase | |
| Male competitive endurance runner (n=11); age, 27±7 years | Treadmill | Mean activity elevated but NS | No change | |
| Male, habitual exercise ≥3 x/week (n=10); age, 23.5±3.95 years | Treadmill, overnight fast then 70% VO2peak 1 h after exercise | Mean salivary α-amylase elevated then leveled marginally but NS | No change | |
| Male national-level Caucasian cyclists(n=12); age, 22.62±3.51 years | Cycle ergometer | Elevated α-amylase concentration in salivary proteins | Increase | |
| Active males (n=21); age, 24±2 years | Treadmill | Pre-exercise vs. stop-point: 45.9±13.7 vs. 279.3±26.7 U/ml | Increase | |
| Male paraplegic athletes (n=9); age, 44±2 years | Handcycle | Pre- vs. post-exercise | Increase | |
| Healthy elderly males (n=7) and females (n=13); age, 64.7±8.2 years | Fitness program for elderly | Pre- vs. post-exercise (NS) | No change | |
| Male university students; n=10; age, 22.2±0.47 years | Walk (20 min) in a forest or urban environment | Mean activity increased in the urban environment and was unchanged in the forest environment (NS) | No change | |
| Black belt taekwondo athletes; male (n=10), 14±0 years | Saliva collected pre- and post youth competition | Elevated during competition | Increase | |
| Male professional swimmers (n=11); age, 21.5±2.16 years | Saliva samples, collected on the first day of national competition and 2 weeks after | Increased salivary α-amylase levels immediately prior to warming up and at 5 min after competition | Increase |
Data are presented as the mean ± SD unless otherwise specified.
Mean ± SEM.
RH, relative humidity; VO2max, maximal oxygen consumption; VO2peak, peak oxygen consumption at high intensity workload; NS, not significant.