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The effect of exercise on innate mucosal immunity

journal contribution
posted on 2017-12-06, 00:00 authored by N West, D Pyne, Jennelle Kyd, G Renshaw, P Fricker, A Cripps
Methods The authors conducted a prospective observational study comparing salivary lactoferrin and lysozyme concentration over 5 months (chronic changes) in elite rowers (n=17, mean age 24.3±4.0 years) with sedentary individuals (controls) (n=18, mean age=27.2±7.1 years) and a graded exercise test to exhaustion (acute changes) with a cohort of elite rowers (n=11, mean age 24.7±4.1). Results: Magnitudes of differences and changes were interpreted as a standardised (Cohen's) effect size (ES). Lactoferrin concentration in the observational study was approximately 60% lower in rowers than control subjects at baseline (7.9±1.2 μg/ml mean±SEM, 19.4±5.6 μg/ml, p=0.05, ES=0.68, 'moderate') and at the midpoint of the season (6.4±1.4 μg/ml mean ± SEM, 21.5±4.2 μg/ml, p=0.001, ES=0.89, 'moderate'). The concentration of lactoferrin at the end of the study was not statistically signifi cant (p=0.1) between the groups. There was no signifi cant difference between rowers and control subjects in lysozyme concentration during the study. There was a 50% increase in the concentration of lactoferrin (p=0.05, ES=1.04, 'moderate') and a 55% increase in lysozyme (p=0.01, ES=3.0, 'very large') from pre-exercise to exhaustion in the graded exercise session. Conclusion: Lower concentrations of these proteins may be indicative of an impairment of innate protection of the upper respiratory tract. Increased salivary lactoferrin and lysozyme concentration following exhaustive exercise may be due to a transient activation response that increases protection in the immediate postexercise period.

Funding

Category 1 - Australian Competitive Grants (this includes ARC, NHMRC)

History

Volume

44

Issue

4

Start Page

227

End Page

231

Number of Pages

5

eISSN

1473-0480

ISSN

0306-3674

Location

United Kingdom

Publisher

B M J Group

Language

en-aus

Peer Reviewed

  • Yes

Open Access

  • No

External Author Affiliations

Australian Institute of Sport; Dept. of Physiology; Griffith Health; Institute for Health and Social Science Research (IHSSR); School of Health Services; School of Medicine; School of Physiotherapy and Exercise Science;

Era Eligible

  • Yes

Journal

British journal of sports medicine.

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