Acute Response to Endurance Exercise Stress: Focus on Catabolic/anabolic Interplay Between Cortisol, Testosterone, and Sex Hormone Binding Globulin in Professional Athletes

Journal of Medical Biochemistry
Bojana PopovicSvetozar S Damjanovic

Abstract

Endocrine system plays a major role in both permissive and regulatory activities in order to adequately respond to physical stress of exercise. But level and direction of activation depend on many factors and are not easily interpreted. We tested a group of male professional athletes (21 water polo players and 15 wrestlers), together with 20 sedentary controls matched by age. All participants took a continuous progressive exercise stress test on a treadmill until exhaustion and plateau of oxygen consumption (VO2). Blood samples for cortisol, sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG) and testosterone were drawn in four time points: baseline (B), start of the test (S), point of maximal strain (MAX) and in the 3rd minute of recovery period (R). Cortisol levels significantly increased in both groups, but the response between S and MAX was more pronounced in controls (p=0.036). The athletes had significantly higher levels of cortisol in all points in test, except during R (p=0.118), when their cortisol levels gradually started to decline. Significant increase in total testosterone was in great deal a consequence of increase in SHBG level (p<0.01 for both). Consequently, calculated free testosterone significantly decreased during test (p=0...Continue Reading

Citations

Jan 18, 2020·International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health·Manuel JiménezVicente Javier Clemente-Suárez
Aug 19, 2020·International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health·Javier AlvesMarcos Maynar
Aug 11, 2020·Journal of Human Kinetics·Grażyna JanikowskaAleksandra Żebrowska
Mar 30, 2021·Frontiers in Physiology·Marc JörresMathias Steinach

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