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Does the temperature of water ingested during exertional-heat stress influence gastrointestinal injury, symptoms, and systemic inflammatory profile?

journal contribution
posted on 2018-08-01, 00:00 authored by Rhiannon SnipeRhiannon Snipe, R J S Costa
OBJECTIVES: The study aimed to determine the effects of temperature of ingested water during exertional-heat stress on gastrointestinal injury, symptoms and systemic inflammatory responses. DESIGN: Randomised cross-over study. METHODS: Twelve endurance runners completed 2h running at 60% v˙O2max in 35°C ambient temperature on three separate occasions, consuming 250±40mL water before and every 15min during running at either 0.4±0.4°C (COLD), 7.3±0.8°C (COOL), or 22.1±1.2°C (TEMP). Rectal temperature and gastrointestinal symptoms were recorded every 10min during exercise. Blood was collected pre, immediately and 1h post-exercise to determine plasma intestinal fatty-acid binding protein (I-FABP), cortisol, and inflammatory cytokine concentrations. RESULTS: Compared to TEMP, COLD and COOL blunted the rise in rectal temperature (2.0±0.5°C vs. 1.6±0.4°C and 1.7±0.4°C, respectively; trial×time, p=0.033). I-FABP increased post-exercise (419%, p<0.001), with a trend for reduced I-FABP on COLD and COOL (mean reduction 460pgmL-1 and 430pgmL-1, respectively), compared to TEMP (p=0.066). No differences were observed between trials for gastrointestinal symptoms, albeit a trend for increased upper-gastrointestinal symptoms on TEMP (p=0.087) compared to COLD and COOL was observed. IL-6, IL-1β, IL-8, IL-10 and IL-1ra increased post-exercise (p<0.05); however no differences were observed between trials. CONCLUSIONS: COLD and COOL water ingestion during exertional-heat stress ameliorates thermoregulatory strain compared to TEMP. However, this appears to have no effect on cytokine profile and minimal effect on intestinal epithelial injury and gastrointestinal symptoms.

History

Journal

Journal of science and medicine in sport

Volume

21

Issue

8

Pagination

771 - 776

Publisher

Elsevier

Location

Amsterdam, The Netherlands

ISSN

1440-2440

eISSN

1878-1861

Language

eng

Publication classification

C Journal article; C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, Sports Medicine Australia