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ImmuneCited

Exercise and resistance to infection.

D C Nieman
Review Canadian journal of physiology and pharmacology 1998 41 次引用
PubMed DOI
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Study Design

研究类型
Review
研究人群
athletes
持续时间
2.0 weeks
干预措施
Exercise and resistance to infection. None
对照组
None
主要结局
immune function
效应方向
Mixed
偏倚风险
Unclear

Abstract

Epidemiological data suggest that endurance athletes are at increased risk for upper respiratory tract infection (URTI) during periods of heavy training and the 1- to 2-week period following race events. Moderate exercise training has been associated with a reduction in incidence of URTI. There is growing evidence that for several hours subsequent to heavy exertion, several components of both the innate (e.g., natural killer cell activity and neutrophil oxidative burst activity) and adaptive (e.g., T and B cell function) immune system exhibit suppressed function. The immune response to heavy exertion is transient, and further research on the mechanisms underlying the immune response to prolonged and intensive endurance exercise is necessary before meaningful clinical applications can be drawn. Some attempts have been made through chemical or nutritional means (e.g., indomethacin, glutamine, vitamin C, and carbohydrate supplementation) to attenuate immune changes following intensive exercise to lower the risk of infection.

简要概述

Epidemiological data suggest that endurance athletes are at increased risk for upper respiratory tract infection during periods of heavy training and the 1- to 2-week period following race events, and moderate exercise training has been associated with a reduction in incidence of URTI.

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