Cargando…

Exercise-related hemoconcentration and hemodilution in hydrated and dehydrated athletes: An observational study of the Hungarian canoeists

Hemoconcentration during exercise is a well-known phenomenon, however, the extent to which dehydration is involved is unclear. In our study, the effect of dehydration on exercise-induced hemoconcentration was examined in 12 elite Hungarian kayak-canoe athletes. The changes of blood markers were exam...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Komka, Zsolt, Szilágyi, Brigitta, Molnár, Dóra, Sipos, Bence, Tóth, Miklós, Sonkodi, Balázs, Ács, Pongrác, Elek, János, Szász, Máté
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9803156/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36584041
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0277978
Descripción
Sumario:Hemoconcentration during exercise is a well-known phenomenon, however, the extent to which dehydration is involved is unclear. In our study, the effect of dehydration on exercise-induced hemoconcentration was examined in 12 elite Hungarian kayak-canoe athletes. The changes of blood markers were examined during acute maximal workload in hydrated and dehydrated states. Dehydration was achieved by exercise, during a 120-minute extensive-aerobic preload. Our research is one of the first studies in which the changes in blood components were examined with a higher time resolution and a wider range of the measured parameters. Hydration status had no effect on the dynamics of hemoconcentration during both the hydrated (HS) and dehydrated (DHS) load, although lower maximal power output were measured after the 120-minute preload [HS Hemoglobin(Hgb)(Max) median 17.4 (q1 17.03; q3 17.9) g/dl vs. DHS Hgb(Max) median 16.9 (q1 16.43; q3 17.6) g/dl (n.s); HS Hematocrit(Hct)(Max) 53.50 (q1 52.28; q3 54.8) % vs. DHS Hct(Max) 51.90 (q1 50.35; q3 53.93) % (n.s)]. Thirty minutes after the maximal loading, complete hemodilution was confirmed in both exercises. Dehydration had no effect on hemoconcentration or hemodilution in the recovery period [HS Hgb(R30’) 15.7 (q1 15.15; q3 16.05) g/dl (n.s.) vs. DHS Hgb(R30’) 15.75 (q1 15.48; q3 16.13) g/dl (n.s.), HS Hct(R30’) 48.15 (q1 46.5; q3 49.2) % vs. DHS Hct(R30’) 48.25 (q1 47.48; q3 49.45) % (n.s.)], however, plasma osmolality did not follow a corresponding decrease in hemoglobin and hematocrit in the dehydrated group. Based on our data, metabolic products (glucose, lactate, sodium, potassium, chloride, bicarbonate ion, blood urea nitrogen) induced osmolality may not play a major role in the regulation of hemoconcentration and post-exercise hemodilution. From our results, we can conclude that hemoconcentration depends mainly on the intensity of the exercise.