Literature DB >> 24669232

Exercise upregulates salivary amylase in humans (Review).

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


1. Introduction

Salivary α-amylase secretion is influenced by adrenergic regulation of the sympathetic nervous system and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis (1). Therefore, exercise may affect salivary α-amylase levels. Granger et al (1) published a review of biobehavioral studies of salivary α-amylase in 2007, suggesting that salivary α-amylase levels markedly increase in response to physical and psychological stress. Studies by Chatterton et al (2) and Kivlighan and Granger (3) identified that salivary α-amylase levels increased in response to exercise. Chatterton et al (2) compared levels of salivary α-amylase in males prior to and following exercise, a written examination or rest, and identified that aerobic exercise induced a three-fold mean increase in α-amylase levels. Kivlighan and Granger (3) observed that salivary α-amylase levels increased by an average of 156% in 42 members (21 females) of a collegiate crew team in response to an ergometer competition. Following publication of the review by Granger et al (1), various groups investigated the correlation between exercise and salivary α-amylase. A portable system for monitoring salivary α-amylase activity was launched in Japan at the end of 2005 (4), which stimulated increased interest in the subject. Certain findings were only published in Japanese. The present review aims to summarize previous studies concerning the correlation between exercise and salivary α-amylase levels published in the English and Japanese literature.

2. Materials and methods

Information was collected from the PubMed (http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/) and CiNii (http://ci.nii.ac.jp/) databases. The latter is a database maintained by the Japanese National Institute of Informatics (Tokyo, Japan), which comprises literature published by Japanese authors in academic journals or university memoirs and is listed in the database of the Japanese National Diet Library (Tokyo, Japan). The search terms were ‘saliva’, ‘amylase’ and ‘exercise’. Original studies published after 2006 concerning the effect of exercise on salivary α-amylase in healthy humans were selected according to the following exclusion criteria: published prior to 2006; the article was not original; the participants were not healthy; the study was intervention-based rather than exercise-based; salivary α-amylase levels/activity were not examined; the language was other than English or Japanese. The PubMed search identified 42 studies. Fifteen reports were excluded as they were published prior to 2006. Thirteen studies were selected from the titles and abstracts of the remaining 27 publications, according to the aforementioned exclusion criteria. The CiNii search identified 12 studies. One was selected via the same procedure described for the PubMed search. Among the 42 publications obtained from PubMed, one review article by Papacosta and Nassis (5) cited 128 publications. According to the exclusion criteria, four articles were selected from the 10 listed among the references that described the correlation between salivary α-amylase and exercise in healthy humans. Three duplicated studies were excluded and the remaining 15 publications were selected (Fig. 1).
Figure 1

Flow 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.

Data are presented as the mean ± SD unless otherwise specified. P<0.05 was considered to indicate a statistically significant difference.

3. Results and Discussion

Ten of the 15 publications observed significant increases in salivary α-amylase activity or levels in response to exercise, five identified no differences and no studies identified a reduction (Table I).
Table I

Parameters of primary studies.

SubjectsExerciseChanges in salivary α-amylaseTrend of change in salivary α-amylaseRef.
Endurance-trained males (n=11); age, 23±1 yearsaBicycle ergometer70% VO2peak (90 min)Pre- vs. 45 min following exercise and post-exercise: 441±81 vs. 1279±248 and 1441±262 U/mlaIncrease6
Healthy males (n=10); age, 23±1 yearsaBicycle ergometer50% or 75% VO2max or repetition of incremental test to exhaustion (same duration as initial VO2max test)α-amylase activity, mean ± SEM (U/ml):50% VO2max, 450±54→552±7775% VO2max, 372±65→674±77Exhaustion, 456±65→710±41Increase7
Trained male volunteers with cycling as primary sport (n=24); age, 23±5 yearsBicycle ergometer60% (2.5 h) and 75% VO2max to exhaustionPre- vs. post-exercise (to exhaustion), 143±23 vs. 463±22 U/mlIncrease8
Healthy males (n=9), healthy females (n=4); age, 24±5 yearsBicycle ergometer55% peak power output at 33°C ≤50%RH up to 3% body weight loss as sweatExercise tended to increase mean salivary α-amylase activity (NS). Dehydration decreased secretion rate but, did not influence salivary α-amylase activityNo change9
Healthy endurance-trained males (n=6); age, 21.8±1.9 yearsTreadmill running50% and 70% VO2max (30 min each) at 30°C and 40% RHPre- vs. post-exercise, 115±27 vs. 180±29 U/mlIncrease10
Elite male wheelchair athletes (n=23); mean age, 27 yearsTreadmill, constant load: 60% VO2peak (30 min × 2)Intermittent trial: 20 sets of 2 min at 80% VO2peak and 1 min at 40% VO2peakIncreased following exercise under constant load and intermittent trialIncrease11
Male competitive endurance runner (n=11); age, 27±7 yearsTreadmill75%VO2max (2 h × 2)Mean activity elevated but NSNo change12
Male, habitual exercise ≥3 x/week (n=10); age, 23.5±3.95 yearsaTreadmill, overnight fast then 70% VO2peak 1 h after exerciseMean salivary α-amylase elevated then leveled marginally but NSNo change13
Male national-level Caucasian cyclists(n=12); age, 22.62±3.51 yearsCycle ergometerInitial load of 50 W, increased by 25 W every 2 min to exhaustionElevated α-amylase concentration in salivary proteinsIncrease14
Active males (n=21); age, 24±2 yearsTreadmill3 min warm-up walk at 0.765 m/sec, single exercise test and ≥5 stages of the Bruce protocol following 1.5 min at peak stage; immediate stopPre-exercise vs. stop-point: 45.9±13.7 vs. 279.3±26.7 U/mlIncrease15
Male paraplegic athletes (n=9); age, 44±2 yearsaHandcycleSelf-paced time trial (1 h)Pre- vs. post-exercise158±47 vs. 281±72 U/mlaIncrease16
Healthy elderly males (n=7) and females (n=13); age, 64.7±8.2 yearsFitness program for elderlyPre- vs. post-exercise (NS)32.7±34.0 vs. 36.3±34.9 U/mlNo change17
Male university students; n=10; age, 22.2±0.47 yearsWalk (20 min) in a forest or urban environmentMean activity increased in the urban environment and was unchanged in the forest environment (NS)No change18
Black belt taekwondo athletes; male (n=10), 14±0 yearsa; female (n=6), (13±1 yearsa)Saliva collected pre- and post youth competitionElevated during competitionIncrease20
Male professional swimmers (n=11); age, 21.5±2.16 yearsSaliva samples, collected on the first day of national competition and 2 weeks afterIncreased salivary α-amylase levels immediately prior to warming up and at 5 min after competitionIncrease21

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.

A simple comparison or meta-analysis was not applicable as the type, duration and intensity of exercise, and the characteristics of the study subjects differed markedly. Eight studies defined exercise intensity as a ratio (%) of the maximum or peak oxygen uptake (VO2max and VO2peak, respectively) or peak power output of the study participants and four used ergometers (6–9) and treadmills (10–13) for exercise loading. Ergometer exercise was consistently demonstrated to elevate salivary α-amylase activity. Bishop et al (6) noted an increase in salivary α-amylase activity following exercise at 70% VO2peak for 90 min in endurance-trained males (age 23±1 years; mean ± SEM). Allgrove et al (7,8) conducted two studies using a bicycle ergometer, one of which determined the effect of exercise in ten active males (age, 23±1 years; mean ± SEM) at intensities of 50% VO2max, 75% VO2max and at incremental loads to exhaustion. The duration was matched to the initial VO2max test. Levels of α-amylase activity increased in all three trials in response to exercise (7). The other study confirmed these results in 24 trained male participants (age, 23±5 years) who cycled for 2.5 h at 60% VO2max followed by 75% VO2max to exhaustion; the mean salivary α-amylase activity increased from 143±23 to 463±22 U/ml (8). Fortes et al (9) observed an increase (not significant) in salivary α-amylase activity during exercise at 55% peak power output at 33°C, with ≤50% relative humidity; up to 3% of body mass was lost due to sweat in 13 participants (age 24±5 years). The control condition, with rehydration to offset fluid loss, was examined and the kinetics of salivary α-amylase activity were almost identical. The participants in these four studies of ergometer exercise were all healthy, with a mean age of ~23–24 years. The intensity of the exercise was low in the study of dehydration (9). Allgrove et al (7) showed that α-amylase activity increased at 50% VO2max and the study by Fortes et al indicated that the mean α-amylase activity increased at 55% peak power output, although not significantly (9). Thus, exercise on a bicycle ergometer at an intensity as low as 55% peak power output may elevate salivary α-amylase activity. By contrast, treadmill running generated mixed results. Fortes and Whitham (10) observed that α-amylase activity was elevated following running on a treadmill for 30 min at 50% VO2max followed by 30 min at 70% VO2max, in six endurance-trained males (age, 21.8±1.9 years). Leicht et al (11) reported that α-amylase activity increased in 23 wheelchair athletes. However, subsequent publications did not confirm these results. According to Costa et al (12), salivary α-amylase activity increased, although not significantly, in 11 male endurance runners who ran at 75% VO2max for 2 h. The findings of Rosa et al (13) from a study of 10 active males who ran on treadmills at 70% VO2max for 1 h supported these results; the mean salivary α-amylase concentrations were increased but the increase was not statistically significant. Three of the four studies, with the exception of the study of wheelchair athletes, comprised small cohorts, which may account for this discrepancy. Five studies demonstrated changes in salivary α-amylase in response to exercise without specifying the exercise intensity (14–18). In one of these studies, 12 Caucasian male national-level cyclists underwent a progressive test on a bicycle ergometer. The initial load was 50 W, which increased by 25 W every 2 min to exhaustion. The salivary α-amylase concentration increased in parallel with the increase in load (14). Galina et al (15) adopted the Bruce protocol test using treadmills. Twenty-one active males performed a single bout of exercise and a minimum of five stages of the Bruce protocol (19). Salivary α-amylase activity increased during the exercise and reached the greatest level following the highest completed stage achieved by each participant (15). Allgrove et al (16) examined responses in male athletes with spinal cord damage. Salivary α-amylase activity increased from 158±47 to 281±72 U/ml (SEM) following 1 h of self-paced handcycling time trials in nine physically active male wheelchair athletes. Ishiguro et al (17) observed changes in α-amylase activity among healthy elderly individuals (age 64.7±8.2 years) during a fitness program comprising a 10 min warm up, 30 min of exercise and a 10 min cool down. The exercise performed was light aerobic gymnastics with singing developed for the elderly and the warm up and cool down consisted of stretching. Salivary α-amylase activity were not affected by the program, as pre-exercise values compared with post-exercise values were 32.7±34.0 versus 36.3±34.9 U/ml, respectively. Yamaguchi et al (18) identified that levels of salivary α-amylase activity in 10 male university students (age 22.2±0.5 years) during a 20 min walk, in forest and urban environments, did not change. With the exception of light gymnastics for the elderly (17) and relaxed walking (18), physical exercise appears to increase salivary α-amylase activity and concentration (14–16). Chiodo et al (20) and Diaz et al (21) investigated the effect of Taekwondo and swimming competitions, respectively. Sixteen taekwondo black belt athletes participated in an official youth competition consisting of three 2-min rounds with 1-min intervals. Salivary α-amylase activity was increased by 115% at the end of the competition compared with the pre-competition values (20). Diaz et al (21) compared the α-amylase concentrations in saliva during a national swimming competition with those two weeks following the event (the control day) in 11 professional swimmers. The α-amylase concentrations immediately prior to warming up for the race and 5 min after finishing were higher than those at the same time on the control day. Thus, psychological and physical stress were considered to contribute to the increase in α-amylase levels. In conclusion, exercise has consistently been shown to increase mean salivary α-amylase activity and concentration in all studies examined in the present review, including those in which changes were not significant, with the exception of the 20-min forest walk (18). The effect tended to be more pronounced at exercise intensities >70% VO2max in healthy young individuals. Therefore, studies published following those reviewed by Granger et al (1) confirm the conclusion that salivary α-amylase levels markedly increase in response to physical stress. Therefore, α-amylase levels may be an effective non-invasive marker of physical stress.
  19 in total

1.  The effects of exercise in forest and urban environments on sympathetic nervous activity of normal young adults.

Authors:  M Yamaguchi; M Deguchi; Y Miyazaki
Journal:  J Int Med Res       Date:  2006 Mar-Apr       Impact factor: 1.671

2.  Salivary alpha-amylase response to competition: relation to gender, previous experience, and attitudes.

Authors:  Katie T Kivlighan; Douglas A Granger
Journal:  Psychoneuroendocrinology       Date:  2006-04-18       Impact factor: 4.905

3.  Effects of exercise intensity on salivary antimicrobial proteins and markers of stress in active men.

Authors:  Judith E Allgrove; Elisa Gomes; John Hough; Michael Gleeson
Journal:  J Sports Sci       Date:  2008-04       Impact factor: 3.337

4.  Mucosal immune responses to treadmill exercise in elite wheelchair athletes.

Authors:  Christof Andreas Leicht; Nicolette Claire Bishop; Victoria Louise Goosey-Tolfrey
Journal:  Med Sci Sports Exerc       Date:  2011-08       Impact factor: 5.411

5.  Moderate acute exercise (70% VO2 peak) induces TGF-β, α-amylase and IgA in saliva during recovery.

Authors:  L Rosa; Aas Teixeira; Fs Lira; S Tufik; Mt Mello; Rvt Santos
Journal:  Oral Dis       Date:  2013-03-06       Impact factor: 3.511

6.  Stimulating whole saliva affects the response of antimicrobial proteins to exercise.

Authors:  J E Allgrove; M Oliveira; M Gleeson
Journal:  Scand J Med Sci Sports       Date:  2013-03-19       Impact factor: 4.221

7.  Salivary Hsp72 does not track exercise stress and caffeine-stimulated plasma Hsp72 responses in humans.

Authors:  Matthew B Fortes; Martin Whitham
Journal:  Cell Stress Chaperones       Date:  2010-12-05       Impact factor: 3.667

8.  Changes in the salivary biomarkers induced by an effort test.

Authors:  V N de Oliveira; A Bessa; R P M S Lamounier; M G de Santana; M T de Mello; F S Espindola
Journal:  Int J Sports Med       Date:  2010-03-18       Impact factor: 3.118

Review 9.  Saliva as a tool for monitoring steroid, peptide and immune markers in sport and exercise science.

Authors:  Elena Papacosta; George P Nassis
Journal:  J Sci Med Sport       Date:  2011-04-07       Impact factor: 4.319

10.  Salivary IgA responses to prolonged intensive exercise following caffeine ingestion.

Authors:  Nicolette C Bishop; Gary J Walker; Gabriella A Scanlon; Stephen Richards; Eleanor Rogers
Journal:  Med Sci Sports Exerc       Date:  2006-03       Impact factor: 5.411

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Authors:  Dennis-Peter Born; Raphael Faiss; Sarah Jean Willis; Jana Strahler; Gregoire P Millet; Hans-Christer Holmberg; Billy Sperlich
Journal:  Eur J Appl Physiol       Date:  2015-08-13       Impact factor: 3.078

2.  Oral lactoferrin influences psychological stress in humans: A single-dose administration crossover study.

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Journal:  Biomed Rep       Date:  2018-03-12

3.  Markers of biological stress in response to a single session of high-intensity interval training and high-volume training in young athletes.

Authors:  Yvonne Kilian; Florian Engel; Patrick Wahl; Silvia Achtzehn; Billy Sperlich; Joachim Mester
Journal:  Eur J Appl Physiol       Date:  2016-09-10       Impact factor: 3.078

4.  Towards multilevel mental stress assessment using SVM with ECOC: an EEG approach.

Authors:  Fares Al-Shargie; Tong Boon Tang; Nasreen Badruddin; Masashi Kiguchi
Journal:  Med Biol Eng Comput       Date:  2017-10-18       Impact factor: 2.602

Review 5.  Low serum amylase and obesity, diabetes and metabolic syndrome: A novel interpretation.

Authors:  Kei Nakajima
Journal:  World J Diabetes       Date:  2016-03-25

6.  Variation of human salivary alpha-amylase proteoforms in three stimulation models.

Authors:  María D Contreras-Aguilar; Jerome Vialaret; Dominique Deville de Périère; Damián Escribano; Sylvain Lehmann; Fernando Tecles; Jose J Cerón; Christophe Hirtz
Journal:  Clin Oral Investig       Date:  2019-08-06       Impact factor: 3.573

Review 7.  Evolvix BEST Names for semantic reproducibility across code2brain interfaces.

Authors:  Laurence Loewe; Katherine S Scheuer; Seth A Keel; Vaibhav Vyas; Ben Liblit; Bret Hanlon; Michael C Ferris; John Yin; Inês Dutra; Anthony Pietsch; Christine G Javid; Cecilia L Moog; Jocelyn Meyer; Jerdon Dresel; Brian McLoone; Sonya Loberger; Arezoo Movaghar; Morgaine Gilchrist-Scott; Yazeed Sabri; Dave Sescleifer; Ivan Pereda-Zorrilla; Andrew Zietlow; Rodrigo Smith; Samantha Pietenpol; Jacob Goldfinger; Sarah L Atzen; Erika Freiberg; Noah P Waters; Claire Nusbaum; Erik Nolan; Alyssa Hotz; Richard M Kliman; Ayalew Mentewab; Nathan Fregien; Martha Loewe
Journal:  Ann N Y Acad Sci       Date:  2016-12-05       Impact factor: 5.691

8.  Detection and measurement of alpha-amylase in canine saliva and changes after an experimentally induced sympathetic activation.

Authors:  María Dolores Contreras-Aguilar; Fernando Tecles; Silvia Martínez-Subiela; Damián Escribano; Luis Jesús Bernal; José Joaquín Cerón
Journal:  BMC Vet Res       Date:  2017-08-22       Impact factor: 2.741

9.  Influence of the way of reporting alpha-Amylase values in saliva in different naturalistic situations: A pilot study.

Authors:  María Dolores Contreras-Aguilar; Damián Escribano; Silvia Martínez-Subiela; Silvia Martínez-Miró; Mónica Rubio; Asta Tvarijonaviciute; Fernando Tecles; Jose J Cerón
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2017-06-27       Impact factor: 3.240

10.  Longitudinal and Immediate Effect of Kundalini Yoga on Salivary Levels of Cortisol and Activity of Alpha-Amylase and Its Effect on Perceived Stress.

Authors:  Jocelyn N García-Sesnich; Mauricio Garrido Flores; Marcela Hernández Ríos; Jorge Gamonal Aravena
Journal:  Int J Yoga       Date:  2017 May-Aug
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