Krieger James W, Crowe Michelle, Blank Sally E
Clinical and Experimental Exercise Science Graduate Program, Washington State University, Spokane, PO Box 1495, Spokane, WA 99210-1495, USA.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2004 Aug;97(2):585-91. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00971.2003. Epub 2004 Apr 23.
Oral glutamine supplementation during and after exercise abolishes exercise-induced decreases in plasma glutamine concentration but does not affect secretory IgA (sIgA) salivary output. Whether chronic glutamine supplementation during high-intensity interval training influences salivary and nasal sIgA concentration is unknown. The purpose of this study was examine the effects of chronic glutamine supplementation on sIgA during intense running training. Runners (n = 13, body mass 69.9 +/- 2.8 kg, peak whole body oxygen uptake 55.5 +/- 2 ml.kg(-1).min(-1), age 29.1 +/- 2.8 yr) participated in twice-daily interval training for 9-9.5 days, followed by recovery (5-7 days). Oral glutamine supplement (0.1 g/kg) or placebo was given four times daily for the first 14 days. After an overnight fast, venous blood, nasal washes, and stimulated saliva were collected at baseline (T1), midtraining (T2), posttraining (T3), and after recovery (T4). Mood states were assessed by using Profile of Mood States (POMS) inventories. We found that glutamine concentration in resting subjects decreased from T1 to T4 (P < 0.05) and was not altered by supplementation. Salivary IgA concentration and output were unchanged by training or supplementation. Mean nasal IgA across the study period was greater in runners receiving glutamine (264.7 +/- 35.0 microg/mg protein) vs. placebo (172.4 +/- 33.7 microg/mg protein; P < 0.05). POMS analyses indicated that vigor was lower at T3 vs. T1 (P < 0.05) and fatigue was higher at T2 vs. T1 and T4 (P < 0.05). We conclude that chronic glutamine supplementation during interval training results in higher nasal IgA than placebo but does not affect salivary IgA concentration or output.
运动期间及运动后口服补充谷氨酰胺可消除运动引起的血浆谷氨酰胺浓度下降,但不影响唾液分泌型免疫球蛋白A(sIgA)的分泌量。高强度间歇训练期间长期补充谷氨酰胺是否会影响唾液和鼻腔sIgA浓度尚不清楚。本研究的目的是探讨长期补充谷氨酰胺对高强度跑步训练期间sIgA的影响。跑步者(n = 13,体重69.9±2.8 kg,峰值全身摄氧量55.5±2 ml·kg⁻¹·min⁻¹,年龄29.1±2.8岁)参加为期9 - 9.5天的每日两次间歇训练,随后进行恢复(5 - 7天)。在最初14天,每天口服谷氨酰胺补充剂(0.1 g/kg)或安慰剂4次。过夜禁食后,在基线(T1)、训练中期(T2)、训练后(T3)和恢复后(T4)采集静脉血、鼻腔灌洗液和刺激唾液。使用情绪状态量表(POMS)评估情绪状态。我们发现,静息受试者的谷氨酰胺浓度从T1到T4下降(P < 0.05),补充剂对此无影响。唾液IgA浓度和分泌量不受训练或补充剂的影响。在整个研究期间,接受谷氨酰胺的跑步者的平均鼻腔IgA(264.7±35.0 μg/mg蛋白质)高于接受安慰剂的跑步者(172.4±33.7 μg/mg蛋白质;P < 0.05)。POMS分析表明,与T1相比,T3时活力较低(P < 0.05),与T1和T4相比,T2时疲劳较高(P < 0.05)。我们得出结论,间歇训练期间长期补充谷氨酰胺导致鼻腔IgA高于安慰剂,但不影响唾液IgA浓度或分泌量。