Literature DB >> 31505122

Prolonged treadmill running in normobaric hypoxia causes gastrointestinal barrier permeability and elevates circulating levels of pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokines.

Garrett W Hill1, Trevor L Gillum2, Ben J Lee3, Phebe A Romano1, Zach J Schall1, Ally M Hamilton1, Matthew R Kuennen1.   

Abstract

This study examined the impact of treadmill running in normobaric hypoxia on gastrointestinal barrier permeability and the systemic inflammatory response. Ten recreationally active participants completed two 1-h bouts of matched-workload treadmill exercise (65% normoxic maximal oxygen consumption) in counterbalanced order. One bout was performed in normoxia (NORM: fraction of inspired oxygen (FIO2) = 20.9%) and the other in normobaric hypoxia (HYP: FIO2 = 13.5%). Minute ventilation, respiratory rate (RR), tidal volume (VT), oxygen consumption, carbon dioxide production, respiratory exchange ratio (RER), and heart rate (HR) were measured with a metabolic cart. Peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2) was measured with pulse oximetry. Absolute tissue saturation (StO2) was measured with near-infrared spectroscopy. Fatty acid-binding protein (I-FABP) and circulating cytokine concentrations (interleukin (IL)-1Ra, IL-6, IL-10) were assayed from plasma samples that were collected pre-exercise, postexercise, 1 h-postexercise, and 4 h-postexercise. Data were analyzed with 2-way (condition × time) repeated-measures ANOVAs. Newman-Keuls post hoc tests were run where appropriate (p < 0.05). As compared with NORM, 1 h of treadmill exercise in HYP caused greater (p < 0.05) changes in minute ventilation (+30%), RR (+16%), VT (+10%), carbon dioxide production (+18%), RER (+16%), HR (+4%), SpO2 (-16%), and StO2 (-10%). Gut barrier permeability and circulating cytokine concentrations were also greater (p < 0.05) following HYP exercise, where I-FABP was shown increased at postexercise (+68%) and IL-1Ra at 1 h-postexercise (+266%). I-FABP and IL-1Ra did not change (p > 0.05) following NORM exercise. IL-6 and IL-10 increased with exercise in both study conditions but were increased more (p < 0.05) following HYP at postexercise (+705% and +127%, respectively) and 1 h-postexercise (+400% and +128%, respectively). Novelty Normobaric hypoxia caused significant desaturation and increased most cardiopulmonary responses by 10%-30%. Significant gut barrier permeability and increased pro- and anti-inflammatory cytokine concentrations could promote an "open window" in the hours following HYP exercise.

Entities:  

Keywords:  altitude training; barrière gastro-intestinale; cardiopulmonary response; endurance exercise; entraînement en altitude; exercice d’endurance; exercise immunology; gastrointestinal barrier; immunologie de l’exercice; inflammation; réponse cardiopulmonaire

Year:  2020        PMID: 31505122     DOI: 10.1139/apnm-2019-0378

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Appl Physiol Nutr Metab        ISSN: 1715-5312            Impact factor:   2.665


  3 in total

1.  Impact of Three Consecutive Days of Endurance Training Under Hypoxia on Muscle Damage and Inflammatory Responses.

Authors:  Daichi Sumi; Keiichi Yamaguchi; Kazushige Goto
Journal:  Front Sports Act Living       Date:  2021-04-15

2.  Secondary Dysfunction of the Intestinal Barrier in the Pathogenesis of Complications of Acute Poisoning.

Authors:  Ju Ju Ivnitsky; T V Schäfer; V L Rejniuk; O A Vakunenkova
Journal:  J Evol Biochem Physiol       Date:  2022-08-28       Impact factor: 1.621

Review 3.  The Gastrointestinal Exertional Heat Stroke Paradigm: Pathophysiology, Assessment, Severity, Aetiology and Nutritional Countermeasures.

Authors:  Henry B Ogden; Robert B Child; Joanne L Fallowfield; Simon K Delves; Caroline S Westwood; Joseph D Layden
Journal:  Nutrients       Date:  2020-02-19       Impact factor: 5.717

  3 in total

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