Research article - (2008)07, 425 - 430 |
Training-Level Induced Changes in Blood Parameters Response to On-Water Rowing Races |
François Denis Desgorces,1,2, Marc Testa1, Cyril Petibois3 |
Key words: Energy metabolism, training, intensive exercise, endurance performance |
Key Points |
|
|
|
Subjects |
A total of 59 athletes participated in this study after a full explanation of the risks and benefits of the study. Subjects gave their written informed consent for participating in accordance with the medical committee of the French Rowing Federation. The sample population comprised three groups of French rowers who competed in varied official events. The first group comprised college rowers (COL; n = 17), the second group comprised national rowers competing on 1000-m races (NAT1000; n = 19), and the third group comprised national rowers competing on 2000-m races (NAT2000; n = 23), 15 subjects both belong to the second and third groups. |
Study design |
Blood samples were collected at rest and immediately post-exercise: i) during a national championship for COL (race distance of 1000-m; Bordeaux, France); ii) during the International Regatta of Bordeaux (France) for NAT1000 (race distance of 1000-m; Bordeaux, France); and iii) during national championships for NAT2000. 1000-m races were performed at the same place and were separated by two weeks; all the races were performed in good environmental conditions. Rowers competed maximally in the study races as the best placing induced lower level of the adversary in the next round. All subjects were in post-absorptive condition, with their last meal at least 2.5 hours before blood collection. Capillary blood samples of ~50 µl were drawn before the warm-up that preceded the race (after a 5-min sited rest period) and immediately after the race (3-4 minutes after exercise completion) using a standard lancet device (Softclix Pro, Boehringer-Manheim, Germany) and gel-barrier collection tubes for microsamples (Microtainer, Becton-Dickinson, USA). |
Training level and rowing performance |
Training volume was determined after discussion with athletes and coaches, and from individual training diaries before the race. The number of years in rowing training was considered as the “rowing experience”. To identify the level of physical performance of NAT, we recorded 2000-m rowing ergometer (Concept II type C, Morrisville, USA) performance realized during official competitive events in the 2-3 months preceeding the study. In our groups; all NAT rowers frequently performed such test whereas many COL did not, therefore ergometer performance in COL could not be recorded. The duration (in seconds) and length (in meters) of the race on which blood samples were collected were used for determining race velocity. |
Blood analyses |
After sampling, blood was immediately centrifuged (3 min at 15000g) and then stored at -20°C before analysis. Serum concentrations of glucose, lactate, TG, glycerol, FA, AA, urea, albumin, haptoglobin, transferrin, α1-acid glycoprotein, α1-antitrypsin, α2-macroglobulin, Apo-A1, Apo-B, and Apo-C3 were determined by FT-IR spectrometry according to the methods previously described using an IFS 28/B spectrometer (Bruker, Germany) (Petibois et al., |
Statistical analyses |
Differences between rowers and races characteristics were tested with unpaired t-test. The repeated-measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) were used for two factors (blood sampling time × blood concentration; groups × blood concentration change) and the Tukey post-hoc test to identify significant differences in concentration changes according to sampling times and groups. We used Pearson product- moment correlation coefficients to determine the relationship between blood parameters, rowers training characteristics and race velocities. All statistics were performed using the Statistica 6. 1 software package (Statsoft, France). The level of significance for all analyses was set at p ¼ 0.05. Data are expressed as mean ± SEM. |
|
|
Training level and rowers characteristics |
Race effects on metabolic parameters |
No race effect was observed in plasma glucose concentrations for any group ( |
Races effects on proteins |
No race effect was observed on albumin and total protein concentrations ( |
|
|
This study was the first to report specific responses of blood markers to on-water rowing races in two populations. Similar training status, rowing experience and physical performance were observed in NAT1000 and NAT2000, whereas COL presented lower training level and experience than NAT. |
Responses of energetic substrates to 1000-m races |
NAT1000 presented a higher lactate concentration increase compared to COL, and lactate concentration changes were found correlated to training volume and rowing experience. Thus, physical conditioning of NAT is likely to have enhanced the muscles capacity to deliver higher energy output from glycolysis and/or NAT could be able to maintain high boat speed despite fatigue and acidosis increase when COL were not (Lacour et al., NAT1000 and COL had similar responses in lipid metabolism after exercise, i.e., no change in glycerol concentration, whose increase could have underlined a significant triglycerides hydrolysis. In this context, the difference observed in the race-induced changes of FA concentration between NAT and COL appears as a peculiar change that was probably not sufficient to demonstrate a significant utilization of lipid metabolism in NAT1000 but probably a sign of a mobilization of energetic substrates that was faster in NAT than in COL. This was probably originated from training as FA changes were found correlated to rowing experience and training volume as previously suggested (Jurimae et al, |
Responses of energetic substrates to 1000 and 2000-m races in NAT rowers |
Differences in race-induced changes in glycerol and FA concentrations appeared between NAT groups, the former increased in NAT2000 but the latter was not different between groups. Race-induced change in glycerol and in FA concentrations indicate lipolysis and enhanced FA availability, respectively, NAT2000 could have a greater utilization of lipid than NAT1000. 2000-m races have a duration that requires a different metabolic regulation than 1000-m races, an observation that was reinforced by the relationship between the training volume and race-induced changes in Apo-C3 concentration. Apo-C3 is the protein responsible for TG transport within blood, but not of its mobilization. In NAT rowers, high intensity exercise was associated with an acute increase in Apo- C3 concentration, which could facilitate TG mobilization. However, concomitant increases in FA and TG concentrations occurred only in NAT2000. The enhancement of lipid availability was only initiated in NAT1000, but marked in NAT2000, highlighting adaptation to endurance training that allows to better undertake the exercise duration of 2000-m races compared to 1000-m . Then, NAT2000 presented higher utilization of oxidative metabolism, as underlined by the changes in lipidic markers in blood after exercise. Conversely, NAT1000 and NAT2000 differed in race velocity, but not in rowing experience, training volume and physical performance that resulted in similar changes in blood lactate concentrations in the two groups whereas 1000-m race was expected to enhance the glycolytic pathway (Lacour et al., |
Race effects on transport and hepatic proteins concentrations |
The rowing exercise effects on protein catabolism or muscle damage is still in debate. Protein metabolism is not measured by the release of AA during a race lasting only a few minutes, however or results demonstrated that race duration led to different responses in inflammatory proteins. AA concentrations were increased in NAT but not in COL, and urea concentrations increased only after the 2000-m race. Moreover, race-induced concentration changes of α1-acid glycoprotein differed between COL and NAT2000. An increase in α1-acid glycoprotein concentrations could occur in response to tissue inflammation and muscle wasting in moderately trained subjects, while a decrease is usually observed after an exercise in highly trained rowers (Petibois et al., |
|
|
Our study demonstrated that the 2000-m compared to 1000-m races in NAT rowers could initiate fatty and amino-acid metabolisms. Increase of FA availability suggested that NAT rowers over 1000-m races could mobilize faster energetic substrates than COL. Therefore, compared to the 1000-m, the 2000-m race induced marked disruption of rowers physiological status highlighting specific adaptations to rowing maximal exercise. The ergometer has been supposed to overestimate the anaerobic contribution to total work output, and maximal test requires total investment of subjects that could be impractical frequently in the sport season and in opposition to the sport season goals. Therefore, these changes in blood parameters in response to a characteristic rowing exercise highlighted the interest to monitor the physiological effects of training in usual sport conditions and according to individual characteristics. |
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY |
|
REFERENCES |
|