Assessment of muscle endocrine function and inflammatory signalling in male school children following a physical activity programme
Metadatos
Afficher la notice complèteAuteur
Díaz Castro, Javier; Reyes Olavarría, Daniela; Toledano, Juan M.; Puche Juárez, María; García Vega, José Eulogio; Ochoa Herrera, Julio José; Moreno Fernández, JorgeEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Children Physical activity Muscle tissue
Date
2024-04Referencia bibliográfica
Diaz-Castro, Javier, et al. Assessment of muscle endocrine function and inflammatory signalling in male school children following a physical activity programme. Clinical Nutrition 43 (2024) 936e942 [10.1016/j.clnu.2024.02.024]
Patrocinador
Excellence Program “Nutrición y Ciencias de los Alimentos” from the University of Granada; FPU contract with grant reference FPU21/04865 funded by Ministry of Education of Spain; Funding for open access charge: Universidad de Granada/CBUA.Résumé
Background & aims: Regular and planned physical activity can diminish the risk of numerous illnesses.
However, school children and teenagers often exercise intermittently and for brief periods, restricting
potential benefits. Furthermore, previous studies mainly focused on body composition, without
providing molecular mechanisms elucidating the role of physical activity in muscle tissue and inflammatory
signalling. The objective of this study was to determine the effect of a vigorous physical activity
intervention on endocrine muscle function and cytokine output in children.
Methods: 103 boys were divided into two groups: control (n = 51, did not perform additional physical
activity) and exercise (n = 52, performed vigorous physical activity). Body composition measurements,
endocrine muscle function and inflammatory signalling biomarkers were assessed at enrolment and
after 6 months of intervention.
Results: No statistical significance was found for fractalkine, oncostatin, EGF, TNF-α and eotaxin. However,
LIF, FBAP3, IL-6, FGF21 and IL-15 increased in the exercise group at the end of the protocol, though
myostatin got decreased. In contrast, IFN-γ was increased in the exercise group at the beginning and end
of the exercise protocol, IL-10 was also increased in this group, IL-1α decreased in the exercise group
before and after the exercise protocol, and IP-10 and MCP-1 also decreased in the exercise group.
Conclusion: It can be affirmed that a physical activity programme for boys was shown to produce
changes in body composition (decreased fat mass, increased lean mass) and in markers of endocrine
muscle function and cytokine release. It is possible that these changes, if sustained, could reduce the risk
of chronic disease.