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Acute and delayed hormonal and blood cell count responses to high-intensity exercise before and after short-term high-intensity interval training

Gregory C. Bogdanis, Αnastassios Philippou, Pinelopi S. Stavrinou, Ρωξάνη Τέντα, Μaria Maridaki

2021Research in Sports Medicine13 citationsDOI

Abstract

The acute and delayed hormonal and blood cell responses to a high-intensity interval training (HIIT) session, were examined before and after a 3-week intervention (9 HIIT sessions of 4–6 × 30 s high-intensity cycling bouts) in eight recreationally active male volunteers (age: 24.3 ± 1.4 y, VO2max: 41.2 ± 3.2 ml/kg/min). Blood samples were collected before and 0.5, 24, 48 h following the first and last training session. Before training, the HIIT session induced acute increases in cortisol, prolactin and TSH concentration, while free-T4 peaked 24 h later (p < 0.001) and testosterone remained unchanged. White blood cell count was increased 0.5 h after exercise (p < 0.001), while lymphocyte percentage decreased 24 h post exercise (p < 0.01). After three weeks of HIIT, cortisol, WBC and lymphocyte responses were decreased by ~42% (p = 0.002), 8.6% (p = 0.032) and 9.6% (p = 0.039), respectively, despite an increase in total work. These findings show that short-term HIIT may induce rapid adaptations of the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal axis and may blunt exercise-induced immune responses.

Topics & Concepts

High-intensity interval trainingMedicineInterval trainingInternal medicineProlactinHormoneEndocrinologyLymphocyteWhite blood cellExercise and Physiological ResponsesCardiovascular and exercise physiologySports Performance and Training