Authors
GC Bogdanis, P Stavrinou, IG Fatouros, A Philippou, A Chatzinikolaou, D Draganidis, G Ermidis, M Maridaki
Publication date
2013/11/1
Journal
Food and Chemical Toxicology
Volume
61
Pages
171-177
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
This study investigated the changes in oxidative stress biomarkers and antioxidant status indices caused by a 3-week high-intensity interval training (HIT) regimen. Eight physically active males performed three HIT sessions/week over 3 weeks. Each session included four to six 30-s bouts of high-intensity cycling separated by 4 min of recovery. Before training, acute exercise elevated protein carbonyls (PC), thiobarbituric acid reactive substances (TBARS), glutathione peroxidase (GPX) activity, total antioxidant capacity (TAC) and creatine kinase (CK), which peaked 24 h post-exercise (252 ± 30%, 135 ± 17%, 10 ± 2%, 85 ± 14% and 36 ± 13%, above baseline, respectively; p < 0.01), while catalase activity (CAT) peaked 30 min post-exercise (56 ± 18% above baseline; p < 0.01). Training attenuated the exercise-induced increase in oxidative stress markers (PC by 13.3 ± 3.7%; TBARS by 7.2 ± 2.7%, p < 0.01) and CK …
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