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Prevalence of Hyponatremia, Renal Dysfunction, and Other Electrolyte Abnormalities Among Runners Before and After Completing a Marathon or Half Marathon

BACKGROUND: Prior reports on metabolic derangements observed in distance running frequently have small sample sizes, lack prerace laboratory measures, and report sodium as the sole measure. HYPOTHESIS: Metabolic abnormalities—hyponatremia, hypokalemia, renal dysfunction, hemoconcentration—are freque...

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Autores principales: Mohseni, Michael, Silvers, Scott, McNeil, Rebecca, Diehl, Nancy, Vadeboncoeur, Tyler, Taylor, Walt, Shapiro, Shane, Roth, Jennifer, Mahoney, Sherry
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3445140/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23016001
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1941738111400561
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author Mohseni, Michael
Silvers, Scott
McNeil, Rebecca
Diehl, Nancy
Vadeboncoeur, Tyler
Taylor, Walt
Shapiro, Shane
Roth, Jennifer
Mahoney, Sherry
author_facet Mohseni, Michael
Silvers, Scott
McNeil, Rebecca
Diehl, Nancy
Vadeboncoeur, Tyler
Taylor, Walt
Shapiro, Shane
Roth, Jennifer
Mahoney, Sherry
author_sort Mohseni, Michael
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Prior reports on metabolic derangements observed in distance running frequently have small sample sizes, lack prerace laboratory measures, and report sodium as the sole measure. HYPOTHESIS: Metabolic abnormalities—hyponatremia, hypokalemia, renal dysfunction, hemoconcentration—are frequent after completing a full or half marathon. Clinically significant changes occur in these laboratory values after race completion. STUDY DESIGN: Observational, cross-sectional study. METHODS: Consenting marathon and half marathon racers completed a survey as well as finger stick blood sampling on race day of the National Marathon to Fight Breast Cancer (Jacksonville, Florida, February 2008). Parallel blood measures were obtained before and after race completion (prerace, n = 161; postrace, n = 195). RESULTS: The prevalence of prerace and postrace hyponatremia was 8 of 161 (5.0%) and 16 of 195 (8.2%), respectively. Hypokalemia was not present prerace but was present in 1 runner postrace (1 of 195). Renal dysfunction occurred prerace in 14 of 161 (8.7%) and postrace in 83 of 195 (42.6%). Among those with postrace renal dysfunction, 45.8% (38 of 83) were classified as moderate or severe. Hemoconcentration was present in 2 of 161 (1.2%) prerace and 6 of 195 (3.1%) postrace. The mean changes in laboratory values were (postrace minus prerace): sodium, 1.6 mmol/L; potassium, −0.2 mmol/L; blood urea nitrogen, 2.8 mg/dL; creatinine, 0.2 mg/dL; and hemoglobin, 0.3 g/dL for 149 pairs (except blood urea nitrogen, n = 147 pairs). Changes were significant for all comparisons (P < 0.01) except potassium (P = 0.08) and hemoglobin (P = 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Metabolic abnormalities are common among endurance racers, and they may be present prerace, including hyponatremia. The clinical significance of these findings is unknown. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: It is unclear which runners are at risk for developing clinically important metabolic derangements. Participating in prolonged endurance exercise appears to be safe in the majority of racers.
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spelling pubmed-34451402012-09-26 Prevalence of Hyponatremia, Renal Dysfunction, and Other Electrolyte Abnormalities Among Runners Before and After Completing a Marathon or Half Marathon Mohseni, Michael Silvers, Scott McNeil, Rebecca Diehl, Nancy Vadeboncoeur, Tyler Taylor, Walt Shapiro, Shane Roth, Jennifer Mahoney, Sherry Sports Health Primary Care BACKGROUND: Prior reports on metabolic derangements observed in distance running frequently have small sample sizes, lack prerace laboratory measures, and report sodium as the sole measure. HYPOTHESIS: Metabolic abnormalities—hyponatremia, hypokalemia, renal dysfunction, hemoconcentration—are frequent after completing a full or half marathon. Clinically significant changes occur in these laboratory values after race completion. STUDY DESIGN: Observational, cross-sectional study. METHODS: Consenting marathon and half marathon racers completed a survey as well as finger stick blood sampling on race day of the National Marathon to Fight Breast Cancer (Jacksonville, Florida, February 2008). Parallel blood measures were obtained before and after race completion (prerace, n = 161; postrace, n = 195). RESULTS: The prevalence of prerace and postrace hyponatremia was 8 of 161 (5.0%) and 16 of 195 (8.2%), respectively. Hypokalemia was not present prerace but was present in 1 runner postrace (1 of 195). Renal dysfunction occurred prerace in 14 of 161 (8.7%) and postrace in 83 of 195 (42.6%). Among those with postrace renal dysfunction, 45.8% (38 of 83) were classified as moderate or severe. Hemoconcentration was present in 2 of 161 (1.2%) prerace and 6 of 195 (3.1%) postrace. The mean changes in laboratory values were (postrace minus prerace): sodium, 1.6 mmol/L; potassium, −0.2 mmol/L; blood urea nitrogen, 2.8 mg/dL; creatinine, 0.2 mg/dL; and hemoglobin, 0.3 g/dL for 149 pairs (except blood urea nitrogen, n = 147 pairs). Changes were significant for all comparisons (P < 0.01) except potassium (P = 0.08) and hemoglobin (P = 0.01). CONCLUSIONS: Metabolic abnormalities are common among endurance racers, and they may be present prerace, including hyponatremia. The clinical significance of these findings is unknown. CLINICAL RELEVANCE: It is unclear which runners are at risk for developing clinically important metabolic derangements. Participating in prolonged endurance exercise appears to be safe in the majority of racers. SAGE Publications 2011-03 /pmc/articles/PMC3445140/ /pubmed/23016001 http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1941738111400561 Text en © 2011 The Author(s)
spellingShingle Primary Care
Mohseni, Michael
Silvers, Scott
McNeil, Rebecca
Diehl, Nancy
Vadeboncoeur, Tyler
Taylor, Walt
Shapiro, Shane
Roth, Jennifer
Mahoney, Sherry
Prevalence of Hyponatremia, Renal Dysfunction, and Other Electrolyte Abnormalities Among Runners Before and After Completing a Marathon or Half Marathon
title Prevalence of Hyponatremia, Renal Dysfunction, and Other Electrolyte Abnormalities Among Runners Before and After Completing a Marathon or Half Marathon
title_full Prevalence of Hyponatremia, Renal Dysfunction, and Other Electrolyte Abnormalities Among Runners Before and After Completing a Marathon or Half Marathon
title_fullStr Prevalence of Hyponatremia, Renal Dysfunction, and Other Electrolyte Abnormalities Among Runners Before and After Completing a Marathon or Half Marathon
title_full_unstemmed Prevalence of Hyponatremia, Renal Dysfunction, and Other Electrolyte Abnormalities Among Runners Before and After Completing a Marathon or Half Marathon
title_short Prevalence of Hyponatremia, Renal Dysfunction, and Other Electrolyte Abnormalities Among Runners Before and After Completing a Marathon or Half Marathon
title_sort prevalence of hyponatremia, renal dysfunction, and other electrolyte abnormalities among runners before and after completing a marathon or half marathon
topic Primary Care
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3445140/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23016001
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1941738111400561
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