Does exercise training type (strength vs. endurance) affect arterial stiffness and vascular endothelium-derived factors in young men?
Young men (strength-trained athletes, endurance-trained athletes, and sedentary controls)
Strength training or endurance training
Sedentary lifestyle (controls)
Plasma ET-1 and NO concentrations, and arterial stiffness (aortic pulse-wave velocity and systemic arterial compliance)surrogate
Differences in endogenous endothelin-1 may partly explain the higher arterial stiffness seen in strength-trained men and the lower arterial stiffness in endurance-trained men.
Arterial stiffness is higher in strength-trained humans and lower in endurance-trained humans. However, the mechanisms underlying these different adaptations are unclear. Vascular endothelium-derived factors, such as endothelin-1 (ET-1) and nitric oxide (NO), play an important role in the regulation of vascular tonus. We hypothesized that endogenous ET-1 and NO participate in the adaptation of arterial stiffness in different types of exercise training. The purpose of this study was to investigate plasma ET-1 and NO concentrations and arterial stiffness in strength- and endurance-trained men. Young strength-trained athletes (SA; n = 11), endurance-trained athletes (EA; n = 12), and sedentary control men (C; n = 12) participated in this study. Maximal handgrip strength in SA and maximal oxygen uptake in EA were markedly greater than in C. Aortic pulse-wave velocity, which is an established index of arterial stiffness, was higher in SA and lower in EA than in C. Additionally, we measured systemic arterial compliance (SAC) using carotid artery applanation tonometry and Doppler echocardiography, because arterial stiffness is a primary determinant of the compliance. SAC was lower in SA and higher in EA compared with that in C. Plasma ET-1 concentrations were higher in SA compared with C and EA. We did not find significant differences in plasma NO concentrations (measured as the stable end product of NO, i.e., nitrite/nitrate). The relationships of plasma ET-1 concentrations to aortic pulse-wave velocity and SAC were linear. These results suggest that differences in endogenous ET-1 may partly participate in the mechanism underlying different adaptations of arterial stiffness in strength- and endurance-trained men.
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Takeshi Otsuki
Ryutsu Keizai University
Seiji Maeda
Preventive Cardiology
Motoyuki Iemitsu
Preventive Cardiology
AJP Heart and Circulatory Physiology
University of Tsukuba
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Otsuki et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69d07eb7632f68323204f56f — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpheart.00678.2006
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