Simpson Richard J, Kunz Hawley, Agha Nadia, Graff Rachel
Department of Health and Human Performance, Laboratory of Integrated Physiology, University of Houston, Houston, Texas, USA.
Department of Health and Human Performance, Laboratory of Integrated Physiology, University of Houston, Houston, Texas, USA.
Prog Mol Biol Transl Sci. 2015;135:355-80. doi: 10.1016/bs.pmbts.2015.08.001. Epub 2015 Sep 5.
Exercise has a profound effect on the normal functioning of the immune system. It is generally accepted that prolonged periods of intensive exercise training can depress immunity, while regular moderate intensity exercise is beneficial. Single bouts of exercise evoke a striking leukocytosis and a redistribution of effector cells between the blood compartment and the lymphoid and peripheral tissues, a response that is mediated by increased hemodynamics and the release of catecholamines and glucocorticoids following the activation of the sympathetic nervous system and the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis. Single bouts of prolonged exercise may impair T-cell, NK-cell, and neutrophil function, alter the Type I and Type II cytokine balance, and blunt immune responses to primary and recall antigens in vivo. Elite athletes frequently report symptoms associated with upper respiratory tract infections (URTI) during periods of heavy training and competition that may be due to alterations in mucosal immunity, particularly reductions in secretory immunoglobulin A. In contrast, single bouts of moderate intensity exercise are "immuno-enhancing" and have been used to effectively increase vaccine responses in "at-risk" patients. Improvements in immunity due to regular exercise of moderate intensity may be due to reductions in inflammation, maintenance of thymic mass, alterations in the composition of "older" and "younger" immune cells, enhanced immunosurveillance, and/or the amelioration of psychological stress. Indeed, exercise is a powerful behavioral intervention that has the potential to improve immune and health outcomes in the elderly, the obese, and patients living with cancer and chronic viral infections such as HIV.
运动对免疫系统的正常功能有深远影响。人们普遍认为,长时间的高强度运动训练会抑制免疫力,而定期进行中等强度运动则有益。单次运动可引发显著的白细胞增多以及效应细胞在血液、淋巴组织和外周组织之间的重新分布,这种反应是由交感神经系统和下丘脑 - 垂体 - 肾上腺轴激活后血流动力学增加以及儿茶酚胺和糖皮质激素的释放介导的。单次长时间运动可能会损害T细胞、NK细胞和中性粒细胞的功能,改变I型和II型细胞因子平衡,并削弱体内对初次和再次抗原的免疫反应。精英运动员在高强度训练和比赛期间经常报告与上呼吸道感染(URTI)相关的症状,这可能是由于黏膜免疫的改变,特别是分泌型免疫球蛋白A的减少。相比之下,单次中等强度运动具有“免疫增强”作用,并已被用于有效提高“高危”患者的疫苗反应。定期进行中等强度运动导致的免疫力提高可能归因于炎症减轻、胸腺质量维持、“老年”和“年轻”免疫细胞组成的改变、免疫监视增强和/或心理压力的改善。事实上,运动是一种强大的行为干预措施,有可能改善老年人、肥胖者以及患有癌症和慢性病毒感染(如HIV)的患者的免疫和健康状况。
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