Litcius/Paper detail

Acute and Chronic Catabolic Responses to CrossFit® and Resistance Training in Young Males

Emanuela Faelli, Ambra Bisio, Roberto Codella, Vittoria Ferrando, Luisa Perasso, Marco Panascì, Danièle Saverino, Piero Ruggeri

2020International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Given the wide variety of conditioning program trainings employed, the present study compared the catabolic effects induced by CrossFit® and resistance training in moderately trained subjects. Twenty males joined either the CrossFit® group (n = 10; 30 min/day of “workout of the day”) or the resistance training (RT) group (n = 10; 30 min/day of resistance exercises) thrice a week, for 8 weeks. Salivary levels of cortisol, interleukin 1-beta (IL-1β), and uric acid were assessed via enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays before (PRE) and 30-min after (POST) SESSION 1 and SESSION 24. Variables’ percentual changes were computed as (POST-PRE)/PRE*100 in each session (Δ%). CrossFit® acutely increased cortisol levels in both sessions, with a significant decrease in Δ%cortisol from SESSION 1 to 24. In the RT group, cortisol values decreased in both sessions, only acutely. A significant decrease in IL-1β levels was registered acutely in both groups, in both sessions, whereas Δ%IL-1β was not different between the two groups. While uric acid levels increased in both groups acutely, a chronic downregulation of Δ%uric acid, from SESSION 1 to 24, was appreciated for the RT group only. Overall, CrossFit® appeared to induce more intense effects than the RT program as to the investigated catabolic responses.

Topics & Concepts

Uric acidCatabolismResistance trainingInternal medicineMedicineEndocrinologySession (web analytics)Physical therapyMetabolismComputer scienceWorld Wide WebExercise and Physiological ResponsesSports Performance and TrainingMuscle metabolism and nutrition