Plasma antioxidant status and cell injury after severe physical exercise
- 17 April 2003
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 100 (9) , 5119-5123
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0831097100
Abstract
Strenuous exercise leads to an increase in metabolic rate, increased production of reactive oxygen species, and compromised antioxidant defense systems. To study the effects of oxidative stress during strenuous exercise, a homogeneous group of 31 male subjects participated in a 6-month, 5 days/week training schedule involving two extreme marches of 50 km and 80 km at sea level, separated by 2 weeks of regular training. Each participant carried 35 kg of extra weight. Blood samples were drawn imediately before and after each march. Twenty-nine subjects completed the 50-km march, and only 16 completed the 80-km march. Plasma levels of reduced ascorbic acid, total ascorbate, and dehydroascorbate did not undergo significant changes during either march. However, the 50- and 80-km marches led to 25% and 37% increases, respectively, in plasma levels of uric acid; due presumably to increases in the metabolic rate and consequent pyrimidine nucleotide metabolism. Both marches led to ≈10-fold increase leakage of creatine phosphokinase into the plasma. Likewise, plasma levels of aspartate transaminase, a characteristic marker of liver injury, increased ≈4-fold. Plasma levels of bilirubin, creatine, urea, and glucose also increased. Plasma protein carbonyl content, a marker of protein oxidative damage, decreased significantly during each march. These results are discussed with respect to the consideration that elevation of the respiration rate during exercise leads to production of more reactive oxygen species than the antioxidant systems can scavenge. Plausible explanations for leakage of molecules into the plasma are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 64 references indexed in Scilit:
- Free radicals and tissue damage produced by exercisePublished by Elsevier ,2005
- Changes in indices of antioxidant status, lipid peroxidation and inflammation in human skeletal muscle after eccentric muscle actionsClinical Science, 1999
- Free Radicals and ExerciseExercise and Sport Sciences Reviews, 1995
- Exercise causes oxidative damage to rat skeletal muscle microsomes while increasing cellular sulfhydrylsLife Sciences, 1994
- Free radicals and antioxidant strategies in sportsThe Journal of Nutritional Biochemistry, 1994
- Effect of Physical Exercise on the Content of 8‐Hydroxydeoxyguanosine in Nuclear DNA Prepared from Human LymphocytesJapanese Journal of Cancer Research, 1993
- Role of free radicals in toxic hepatic injury I. free radical biochemistryJournal of Toxicology: Clinical Toxicology, 1993
- Vitamin E inhibits protein oxidation in skeletal muscle of resting and exercised ratsBiochemical and Biophysical Research Communications, 1992
- Biochemical Mechanisms for Oxygen Free Radical Formation During ExerciseSports Medicine, 1990
- Oxygen-Derived Free Radicals in Postischemic Tissue InjuryNew England Journal of Medicine, 1985