Laboratório de Metabolômica (LabMet), Universidade Do Estado Do Rio de Janeiro (UERJ), Instituto de Biologia Roberto Alcântara Gomes, Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
Instituto de Educação Física E Desportos, Laboratório de Atividade Física E Promoção da Saúde (Labsau), Universidade Do Estado Do Rio de Janeiro (UERJ), Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil.
Metabolomics. 2024 May 25;20(3):63. doi: 10.1007/s11306-024-02124-z.
Fighter pilots must support the effects of many stressors, including physical and psychological exertion, circadian disturbance, jet lag, and environmental stress. Despite the rigorous selection of military pilots, those factors predispose to failures in physiological compensatory mechanisms and metabolic flexibility.
We compared through NMR-based metabolomics the metabolic profile of Brazilian F5 fighter pilots with different flight experiences vs. the control group of non-pilots. We hypothesized that combat pilots have metabolic flexibility associated with combat flight time.
We evaluated for the first time 34 Brazilian fighter pilots from Santa Cruz Air Base (Rio de Janeiro, RJ) allocated into three groups: pilots with lower total accumulated flight experience < 1,100 h (PC1, n = 7); pilots with higher total accumulated flight experience ≥ 1,100 h (PC2, n = 6); military non-pilots (CONT, n = 21). Data collection included anthropometric measurements, total blood count, lipidogram, markers of oxidative stress, and serum NMR-based metabolomics.
In comparison with controls (p < 0.05), pilots exhibited decreased levels of white blood cells (-13%), neutrophils (-15%), lymphocytes (-20%), alfa-glucose (-13%), lactate (-26%), glutamine (-11%), histidine (-20%), and tyrosine (-11%), but higher isobutyrate (+ 10%) concentrations. Significant correlations were found between lactate vs. amino acids in CONT (r = 0.55-0.68, p < 0.001), and vs. glutamine in PC2 (r = 0.94, p = 0.01).
Fighter pilots with lower experience showed a dysregulation in immune-metabolic function in comparison with controls, which seemed to be counteracted by the accumulation of flight hours. Those findings might have implications for the health preservation and operational training of fighter pilots.
战斗机飞行员必须应对许多应激源的影响,包括身体和心理的消耗、昼夜节律紊乱、时差和环境应激。尽管对军事飞行员进行了严格的选拔,但这些因素使飞行员的生理代偿机制和代谢灵活性容易出现故障。
我们通过基于 NMR 的代谢组学比较了具有不同飞行经验的巴西 F5 战斗机飞行员与非飞行员对照组的代谢谱。我们假设战斗飞行员具有与战斗飞行时间相关的代谢灵活性。
我们首次评估了来自圣克鲁斯空军基地(里约热内卢,里约热内卢州)的 34 名巴西战斗机飞行员,将他们分为三组:总飞行经验累积时间<1100 小时的飞行员(PC1,n=7);总飞行经验累积时间≥1100 小时的飞行员(PC2,n=6);军事非飞行员(CONT,n=21)。数据收集包括人体测量、全血细胞计数、血脂谱、氧化应激标志物和血清基于 NMR 的代谢组学。
与对照组相比(p<0.05),飞行员的白细胞(-13%)、中性粒细胞(-15%)、淋巴细胞(-20%)、α-葡萄糖(-13%)、乳酸(-26%)、谷氨酰胺(-11%)、组氨酸(-20%)和酪氨酸(-11%)水平降低,但异丁酸(+10%)浓度升高。在 CONT 中,乳酸与氨基酸之间存在显著相关性(r=0.55-0.68,p<0.001),在 PC2 中,乳酸与谷氨酰胺之间存在显著相关性(r=0.94,p=0.01)。
与对照组相比,经验较少的战斗机飞行员的免疫代谢功能出现失调,而随着飞行时间的积累,这种失调似乎得到了缓解。这些发现可能对战斗机飞行员的健康保护和操作训练具有重要意义。