Simple Summary Strenuous exercise can alter various functions of circulating phagocytes. We tested whether exhaustive exercise could influence spontaneous and fMLP-induced oxidant production (measured with luminol enhanced whole blood chemiluminescence… Click to show full abstract
Simple Summary Strenuous exercise can alter various functions of circulating phagocytes. We tested whether exhaustive exercise could influence spontaneous and fMLP-induced oxidant production (measured with luminol enhanced whole blood chemiluminescence (LBCL) normalized per phagocyte count) by blood phagocytes in amateur sportsmen. Exhaustive exercise transiently enhanced (no more than one hour from the end of bout) spontaneous oxidants generation by circulating phagocytes, while response to fMLP was decreased up to 24 h post exercise. It is suggested that a short lived increase in spontaneous oxidants production can switch on various mechanisms leading to an increase in antioxidant activity in regularly training subjects. Abstract Strenuous exercise alters the oxidative response of blood phagocytes to various agonists. However, little is known about spontaneous post exercise oxidant production by these cells. In this cross-over trial, we tested whether an exhaustive treadmill run at a speed corresponding to 70% of VO2max affects spontaneous and fMLP-provoked oxidant production by phagocytes in 18 amateur sportsmen. Blood was collected before, just after, and 1, 3, 5 and 24 h post exercise for determination of absolute and normalized per phagocyte count spontaneous (a-rLBCL, rLBCL) and fMLP-induced luminol-enhanced whole blood chemiluminescence (a-fMLP-LBCL, fMLP-LBCL). a-rLBCL and rLBCL increased by 2.5- and 1.5-times just after exercise (p < 0.05) and then returned to baseline or decreased by about 2-times at the remaining time-points, respectively. a-fMLP-LBCL increased 1.7- and 1.6-times just after and at 3 h post-exercise (p < 0.05), respectively, while fMLP-LBCL was suppressed by 1.5- to 2.3-times at 1, 3, 5 and 24 h post-exercise. No correlations were found between elevated post-exercise a-rLBCL, a-fMLP-LBCL and run distance to exhaustion. No changes of oxidants production were observed in the control arm (1 h resting instead of exercise). Exhaustive exercise decreased the blood phagocyte-specific oxidative response to fMLP while increasing transiently spontaneous oxidant generation, which could be a factor inducing secondary rise in antioxidant enzymes activity.
               
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