Publication | Closed Access
Exercise as a model to study redox homeostasis in blood: the effect of protocol and sampling point
39
Citations
30
References
2012
Year
Physical ActivityHomeostatic MechanismPhysiological Oxidative StressRedox HomeostasisRedox BiologyOxidative StressKinesiologyMuscle InjuryExerciseSampling PointApplied PhysiologyLevel TreadmillHealth SciencesDownhill TreadmillPhysical FitnessHypoxia (Medicine)Exercise SciencePhysiologyExercise PhysiologyMedicine
Twenty males ran either on a level treadmill (nonmuscle-damaging condition) or on a downhill treadmill (muscle-damaging condition). Blood and urine samples were collected before and after exercise (immediately after, 1h, 4h, 24h, 48h, and 96h). The following assays were performed: F(2)-isoprostanes in urine, protein carbonyls in plasma, glutathione, superoxide dismutase, glutathione peroxidase, and catalase in erythrocytes. The main finding was that monophasic redox responses were detected after nonmuscle-damaging exercise compared to the biphasic responses detected after muscle-damaging exercise. Based on these findings, muscle-damaging exercise may be a more appropriate experimental model to induce physiological oxidative stress.
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