Title
Cytokine responses to repeated, prolonged walking in lean versus overweight/obese individuals
Author
Verheggen, R.J.H.M.
Eijsvogels, T.M.H.
Catoire, M.
Terink, R.
Ramakers, R.
Bongers, C.C.W.G.
Mensink, M.
Hermus, A.R.M.M.
Thijssen, D.H.J.
Hopman, M.T.E.
Publication year
2019
Abstract
Objectives. Obesity is characterized by a pro-inflammatory state, which plays a role in the pathogenesis of metabolic and cardiovascular disease. An exercise bout causes a transient increase in pro-inflammatory cytokines, whilst training has anti-inflammatory effects. No previous study examined whether the exercise-induced increase in pro-inflammatory cytokines is altered with repeated prolonged exercise bouts and whether this response differs between lean and overweight/obese individuals. Design. Lean (n = 25, BMI 22.9 ± 1.5 kg/m2) and age-/sex-matched overweight/obese (n = 25; BMI 27.9 ± 2.4 kg/m2) individuals performed walking exercise for 30, 40 or 50 km per day on four consecutive days (distances similar between groups). Methods. Circulating cytokines (IL-6, IL-10, TNF-α, IL-1β and IL-8) were examined at baseline and <30 min after the finish of each exercise day. Results. At baseline, no differences in circulating cytokines were present between groups. In response to prolonged exercise, all cytokines increased on day 1 (IL-1β: P = 0.02; other cytokines: P < 0.001). IL-6 remained significantly elevated during the 4 exercise days, when compared to baseline. IL-10, TNF-α, IL-1β and IL-8 returned to baseline values from exercise day 2 (IL-10, IL-1β, IL-8) or exercise day 3 (TNF-α) onward. No significant differences were found between groups for all cytokines, except IL-8 (Time*Group Interaction P = 0.02). Conclusions. These data suggest the presence of early adaptive mechanisms in response to repeated prolonged walking, demonstrated by attenuated exercise-induced elevations in cytokines on consecutive days that occur similar in lean and overweight/obese individuals.
Subject
Defence, Safety and Security
Obesity
Inflammation
Training
Adaptive response
To reference this document use:
http://resolver.tudelft.nl/uuid:28974a70-144c-4b0f-8b66-31b08432cfa8
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsams.2018.07.019
TNO identifier
871736
Document type
article