| PLATELET
ACTIVITY AND SENSITIVITY TO AGONISTS AFTER EXHAUSTIVE TREADMILL EXERCISE
|
Thomas Hilberg1 ,
Volker Schmidt1, Wolfgang Lösche2
and
Holger H.W. Gabriel1
|
1Department of Sports Medicine, Friedrich-Schiller-University Jena, Germany.
2Centre of Vascular Biology and Medicine, Erfurt, Friedrich-Schiller-University
Jena, Germany.
| Received |
|
04 October 2002 |
| Accepted |
|
30
December 2002 |
| Published |
|
01 March 2003 |
©
Journal of Sports Science and Medicine (2003) 2, 15 -
22
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The extent of platelet activation after exhaustive exercise remains under
discussion. Previous studies have provided contrary data, probably due to
differences in the methodologies and the enrolled subjects. In the present
study a maximal treadmill exercise (TR) was used to test platelet activity
and -reactivity in 13 healthy non-smoking men. Blood samples were taken
after a 30min rest, immediately before and after exercise, and 1h after
completion of exercise. Platelets were analysed by whole blood flow cytometry
either directly or after in vitro stimulation by incubating the blood samples
for 10min with TRAP-6 (10µM) or ADP (5µM or 2,5µM). Binding of an anti-CD62P
antibody or a PAC1 antibody directed against the activated fibrinogen receptor
GPIIb/IIIa were used as a measure of platelet activation. Immediately after
TR the percent CD62P positive platelets (%PC) unstimulated increased (p<0.01)
from 0.77±0.06 to 1.12± 0.09 %PC and in PAC1 (p<0.05) from 2.32 ±0.54 to
3.83±0.81 %PC (mean±SEM). After ADP-stimulation an increase from 4.18±1.02
to 5.69±1.40 %PC in CD62P (p<0.01) and from 45.7±3.4 to 57.9±6.6 %PC in
PAC1 (p<0.05) after TR were detected. Using TRAP-6-stimulation only the
increase of PAC1 (p<0.01) after TR was different in comparison with the
control experiment without exercise. Soluble CD62P in plasma as a marker
of platelet and endothelial cell activation was also enhanced (p<0.05) after
TR. Although these results indicate that exhaustive exercise lead to a small
platelet activation and an increase in platelet reactivity, it is rather
doubtful that these changes alone implicate a prothrombotic situation in
healthy young non-smokers.
KEY WORDS:
Platelet activation,
CD62P, PAC1, sCD62P, physical activity.
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