Seawater Hydration Modulates IL-6 and Apelin Production during Triathlon Events: A Crossover Randomized Study
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González Acevedo, Olivia; Aragón Vela, Jerónimo; Cruz Márquez, Juan Carlos De La; Martínez Marín, Manuel Alfonso; Casuso, Rafael A.; Rodríguez Huertas, Jesús FranciscoEditorial
MDPI
Materia
exercise physiology endurance exercise sweating
Date
2022-08-04Referencia bibliográfica
González Acevedo, O. et. al. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 9581. [https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19159581]
Sponsorship
Quinton. GAO received a CONACYT (Mexican government) Ph.D. GrantAbstract
A triathlon is an endurance event in which athletes need an efficient hydration strategy
since hydration is restricted at different stages. However, it seems that seawater intake can be a
suitable hydration alternative for this type of endurance event. Therefore, the aim of this study was
to evaluate the efficacy of seawater hydration during a triathlon on cytokine production. Fifteen
trained male triathletes (age = 38.8 5.62 years old; BMI = 22.58 2.51 kg/m2) randomly performed
three triathlons, one of them consuming seawater (Totum SPORT, Laboratories Quinton International,
S.L., Valencia, Spain), the other one consuming tap water ad libitum, and the last a physiologic saline
solution as placebo. The triathlon consisted of an 800 m swim, a 90 km bike ride, and a 10 km run.
Blood samples were taken at rest and after training, where markers of inflammation, hemoglobin,
and hematocrit concentration were assessed. While the seawater was not ergogenic, it significantly
increased the release of IL-6 and apelin post-exercise. However, no differences were found between
the fractalkine, IL-15, EPO, osteonectin, myostatin, oncostatin, irisin, FSTL1, osteocrin, BDNF, and
FGF-21 values over those of the placebo group. The present study demonstrates that hydration
with seawater stimulates myokine production, which could lead to improved performance recovery
after exercise.