Serum free cortisol responses to a standard exercise test among elite triathletes

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Deutscher übersetzter Titel:Reaktionen des freien Kortisols im Serum von Spitzen-Triathleten auf einen Standard-Leistungstest
Autor:Rowbottom, D.G.; Keast, D.; Garcia-Webb, P.; Morton, A.R.
Erschienen in:Australian journal of science & medicine in sport
Veröffentlicht:27 (1995), 4, S. 103-107, Lit.
Format: Literatur (SPOLIT)
Publikationstyp: Zeitschriftenartikel
Medienart: Gedruckte Ressource
Sprache:Englisch
ISSN:0813-6289
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Erfassungsnummer:PU199704203897
Quelle:BISp

Abstract des Autors

Eighteen elite male triathletes completed an incremental treadmill run to volitional exhaustion, followed by two maximal cycle ergometer sprints. Venous blood samples were obtained at rest (R), immediately post- (P) and one hour post-exercise (H). Serum was analysed for total cortisol (TC) by a radioimmunoassay, and free cortisol (FC) by a temperature and time dependent ultrafiltration/dialysis method. Mean (+/-SE) resting cortisol levels were 627+/-23 (TC) and 12.5+/-2.5 nmol/l (FC). The mean percentage increase in TC (P vs. R) was 49.0+/-7.3%, accompanied by a 344+/-47% increase in FC. Significantly divergent total cortisol responses (H vs. P) were observed within the group, and the athletes were divided into two sub-groups (A and B) on this basis. In group A, both TC and FC returned to resting levels. In group B, there was a further slight increase in TC, accompanied by a significant increase in FC reaching 851+/-268% of resting levels. These data suggest that exercise-induced increases in free cortisol, and hence its catabolic effect, are of much greater relative magnitude than TC changes. The relationship between TC and FC was best fitted to an exponential regression, with a clear-cut change in slope at 700 nmol/l (TC), suggesting saturation of the binding protein. We suggest that the measurement of cortisol in athletes be reassessed, favouring determination of FC in the future. Verf.-Referat