Smith J A
Department of Physiology and Applied Nutrition, Australian Institute of Sport, Belconnen, ACT.
Sports Med. 1995 Jan;19(1):9-31. doi: 10.2165/00007256-199519010-00002.
Endurance training can lead to what has been termed 'sports anaemia'. Although under normal conditions, red blood cells (RBCs) have a lifespan of about 120 days, the rate of aging may increase during intensive training. However, RBC deficiency is rare in athletes, and sports anaemia is probably due to an expanded plasma volume. Cycling, running and swimming have been shown to cause RBC damage. While most investigators measure indices of haemolysis (for example, plasma haemoglobin or haptoglobin), RBC removal is normally an extravascular process that does not involve haemolysis. Attention is now turning to cellular indices (such as antioxidant depletion, or protein or lipid damage) that may be more indicative of exercise-induced damage. RBCs are vulnerable to oxidative damage because of their continuous exposure to oxygen and their high concentrations of polyunsaturated fatty acids and haem iron. As oxidative stress may be proportional to oxygen uptake, it is not surprising that antioxidants in muscle, liver and RBCs can be depleted during exercise. Oxidative damage to RBCs can also perturb ionic homeostasis and facilitate cellular dehydration. These changes impair RBC deformability which can, in turn, impede the passage of RBCs through the microcirculation. This may lead to hypoxia in working muscle during single episodes of exercise and possibly an increased rate of RBC destruction with long term exercise. Providing RBC destruction does not exceed the rate of RBC production, no detrimental effect to athletic performance should occur. An increased rate of RBC turnover may be advantageous because young cells are more efficient in transporting oxygen. Because most techniques examine the RBC population as a whole, more sophisticated methods which analyse cells individually are required to determine the mechanisms involved in exercise-induced damage of RBCs.
耐力训练可能导致所谓的“运动性贫血”。尽管在正常情况下,红细胞(RBC)的寿命约为120天,但在高强度训练期间衰老速度可能会加快。然而,运动员中红细胞缺乏的情况很少见,运动性贫血可能是由于血浆量增加所致。骑自行车、跑步和游泳已被证明会导致红细胞损伤。虽然大多数研究人员测量溶血指标(例如血浆血红蛋白或触珠蛋白),但红细胞清除通常是一个血管外过程,不涉及溶血。现在人们的注意力转向细胞指标(如抗氧化剂消耗、蛋白质或脂质损伤),这些指标可能更能表明运动引起的损伤。红细胞容易受到氧化损伤,因为它们持续暴露于氧气中,且含有高浓度的多不饱和脂肪酸和血红素铁。由于氧化应激可能与摄氧量成正比,因此在运动过程中肌肉、肝脏和红细胞中的抗氧化剂会被消耗并不奇怪。红细胞的氧化损伤还会扰乱离子稳态并促进细胞脱水。这些变化会损害红细胞的变形能力,进而阻碍红细胞通过微循环。这可能导致单次运动期间工作肌肉缺氧,并可能导致长期运动时红细胞破坏率增加。只要红细胞破坏不超过红细胞生成率,就不会对运动表现产生不利影响。红细胞周转率增加可能是有利的,因为年轻细胞在运输氧气方面更有效。由于大多数技术是对整个红细胞群体进行检测,因此需要更复杂的单独分析细胞的方法来确定运动引起红细胞损伤的机制。