| Literature DB >> 29910316 |
Joshua H Guy1, Grace E Vincent2.
Abstract
Exercise-induced heat production is further elevated by exercise performed in hot conditions and this can subsequently impact inflammation, and gastrointestinal (GI) health. Implementing nutrition and supplementation strategies under these conditions may support the hyperthermic response, the systemic inflammatory response, GI permeability and integrity, and exercise performance. Therefore, the aim of this brief review is to explore athletes' inflammatory response of two key biomarkers, lipopolysaccharide (LPS), and interleukin-6 (IL-6), and provide nutrition and supplementation recommendations when exercising in hot conditions. There is emerging evidence that probiotics, glutamine, and vitamin C can preserve GI integrity, which may improve performance during exercise in the heat. Glucose rich food when consumed with water, before and during exercise in the heat, also appear to limit endotoxemia, preserve GI integrity, and reduce the incidence of GI disturbances compared with water alone. The use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) may compromise GI integrity and this may result in greater leakage of endotoxins during long duration exercise in the heat. Further work is required to elucidate the impact of nutrition and supplementation strategies, in particular the use of NSAIDs, when exercising in the heat.Entities:
Keywords: cytokines; gastrointestinal permeability; heat stress; hydration; inflammation
Year: 2018 PMID: 29910316 PMCID: PMC5969196 DOI: 10.3390/sports6010012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sports (Basel) ISSN: 2075-4663
Figure 1Diagrammatic representation of factors related to exercise induced gastrointestinal permeability. Strenuous physical exercise leads to redistribution of blood, shunting blood away from the splanchnic area, thereby significantly reducing splanchnic blood flow and resulting in mucosal damage and loss of integrity to the gut wall. Further research is required to determine whether exercise-induced mucosal injury can be attenuated by nutritional strategies, potentially increasing athletic performance, and improving post-exercise recovery. Adapted from Van Wijck et al., (2012) [13].
Gastrointestinal permeability and inflammatory cytokine response to exercise following nutrition and supplementation interventions.
| Author | Oxygen Uptake (mL·kg−1·min−1) and Sample Size (n) | Experimental Conditions | Exercise and Nutrition/Supplementation Intervention | Biomarker Response |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ashton et al., (2003) [ | 49 ± 3, | Laboratory (temperate) | 1000 mg of
| L-ascorbic acid: ↓ LPS |
| Bishop et al., (2001) [ | 49 ± 3, | Laboratory (22 °C, 56% RH) | 3 day Low-CHO or High-CHO diet. | High-CHO: ↓ IL-6 |
| Buckley et al., (2009) [ | 53 ± 2, | Laboratory (temperate) | 8 week daily supplementation 60 g Bovine Colostrum. | Bovine Colostrum: ↑ L:R |
| Cox et al., (2010) [ | 65 ± 5, | Laboratory (temperate) | 28 day Moderate-CHO or High-CHO diet. | Moderate-CHO: ↑ IL-6 |
| Moncada-Jiménez et al., (2010) [ | 57 ± 7, | Laboratory (temperate) | 48 h Low-CHO or High-CHO. | Low-CHO: ↑ IL-6 and LPS-LPB |
| Morrison et al., (2014) [ | 64 ± 4, | 30 °C, 50% RH | 1 week daily supplementation 1.7 g·kg−1 Bovine Colostrum. 30 min cycling at 50% HRR, 30 min running at 80% HRR | Bovine Colostrum: ↑ IL-6 and I-AFBP |
| Shing et al., (2014) [ | 63 ± 6, | 35 °C, 40% RH | 4 weeks daily supplementation probiotics capsule. | Probiotic: ↓ L:R and LPS |
| Pugh et al., (2017) [ | 52 ± 5, | 30 °C, 40–45% RH | 0.25, 0.5 or 0.9 g·kg−1 glutamine 2 h before exercise. | 0.25, 0.5 and 0.9 g.kg−1 ↓ L:R |
| Snipe et al., (2017) [ | 54 ± 6, | 35 °C, 27% RH | Water or CHO (15 g) or energy-matched PRO before and every 20 min during 2 h running at 60% VO2 max | CHO and PRO: ↓ I-AFBP and L:R |
| Van Wijck et al., (2012) [ | Well trained, | Laboratory (temperate) | 400 mg ibuprofen 1 h before exercise. | Ibuprofen: ↑ I-AFBP and L:R |
CHO, carbohydrate. HRR, heart rate reserve. IL-6, interleukin-6. I-FABP, intestinal fatty acid binding protein. L:R, lactulose to rhamnose ratio. LPS–LPB, lipopolysaccharide-binding protein. PRO, protein. RH, relative humidity. TT, time trial. Wmax, maximum workload. ↑, increase. ↓, decrease.