Minato K
Wayo Women's University, Chiba, Japan.
Eur J Appl Physiol Occup Physiol. 1997;76(6):491-4. doi: 10.1007/s004210050280.
The effect of chronic exercise on pancreatic enzyme activity and basal pancreatic secretion was investigated in rats. Male Wistar rats were divided into three groups of ten rats each. In a trained (T) group, the animals were exercised on a treadmill at 35 m x min(-1) for 60 min, 5 days x week(-1). A free-fed control (C) group and a pair-fed control (PFC) group were kept sedentary. Food intake in the PFC group was restricted to the T group levels. After 6 weeks, pancreas wet mass per unit of body mass was significantly larger in the T group in comparison to the C and PFC groups. Protein content, and amylase and lipase activities of the pancreas were significantly higher in the T group in comparison to the C and PFC groups. Basal amylase but not bile-pancreatic juice volume was higher in the T group than in the other two groups. There were no significant differences between groups C and PFC in any of the above parameters. These results would suggest that pancreatic enzyme synthesis and basal secretion are accelerated with physical endurance training. This adjustment would be a beneficial adaptation to chronic endurance exercise, which requires a large energy supply from food.