SAXTON, J. M., CLAXTON, D., WINTER, E. and POCKLEY, A. G. (2003). Peripheral blood leucocyte functional responses to acute eccentric exercise in humans are influenced by systemic stress, but not by exercise-induced muscle damage. Clinical science, 104 (1), 69-77. [Article]
Abstract
<p>The effects of comparable lower-limb eccentric exercise that induces high (bench-stepping;
STEP) and low (repeated eccentric muscle action; ECC) systemic stress on neutrophil and
monocyte phagocytic and respiratory burst activity, and activation antigen (CD11b, CD66b,
CD64) expression, were compared in recreationally active subjects (20±37 years old). Leucocyte
responses were determined before and 4, 24, 48 and 72 h after exercise using whole-blood flow
cytometry. Serum creatine kinase (CK) activity and perceived muscle soreness [delayed-onset
muscle soreness (DOMS)] were assessed at the same time points up to 96 h; as a control,
measurements were taken during 5 days of rest. DOMS in quadriceps and contralateral triceps
surae peaked 24-72 h after STEP (P<0.05) and 48-72 h after ECC (P<0.05), whereas serum CK
activity (mean±S.E.M.) was only higher than baseline after ECC (15123±3488 at 96 h compared
with 115±29 units [ l−1 pre-exercise; P<0.01). The total leucocyte count increased from
(5.4±0.4)x10<sup>9</sup> [ l−1 and (5.7±0.5)x10<sup>9</sup> [ l−1 at baseline to (7.6±0.5)x10<sup>9</sup> [ l−1 and
(7.0±0.5)x10<sup>9</sup> [ l−1 at 4 h after STEP and ECC respectively; this was largely attributable to
changes in the neutrophil count (P<0.05). The proportion of neutrophils undergoing
phagocytosis and respiratory burst was unchanged 4 h after ECC and STEP, which, given the
increase in neutrophil count after exercise, would suggest an overall improvement in systemic
neutrophil microbicidal potential. The intensity of neutrophil (P=0.01) and monocyte (P<0.05)
phagocytosis and neutrophil respiratory burst responses (P<0.05) was only increased 24 h after
STEP, whereas no changes in these measures were observed after ECC. Activation antigen
expression was unchanged in all groups. These findings suggest that systemic stress evoked
during an acute bout of eccentric exercise has a greater influence on subsequent leucocyte
functional responses than the degree of muscle damage induced.</p>
More Information
Metrics
Altmetric Badge
Dimensions Badge
Share
Actions (login required)
View Item |