Adaptation related to cytokines in man: effects of regular swimming in ice-cold water

The cytokine response after thermal stress (sauna + swimming in ice‐cold water) was investigated in subjectively healthy persons. Two groups were studied at the end of the winter season: habitual and inexperi‐ enced winter swimmers. Blood was collected at rest, after a sauna bath and after a short s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Clinical physiology (Oxford) 2000-03, Vol.20 (2), p.114-121
Hauptverfasser: DUGUE, B, LEPPÄNEN, E
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The cytokine response after thermal stress (sauna + swimming in ice‐cold water) was investigated in subjectively healthy persons. Two groups were studied at the end of the winter season: habitual and inexperi‐ enced winter swimmers. Blood was collected at rest, after a sauna bath and after a short swim in ice‐cold water. Conventional methods and ELISA kits were used to determined the blood picture, serum cortisol and dehydroepiandrosterone sulphate, plasma anti‐diuretic hormone (ADH) levels, and the levels of several cytokines in plasma and in the supernatants of blood cell cultures which were stimulated with lipopolysaccharide (LPS). In regular winter swimmers, the concentrations of plasma interleukin 6 (IL‐6), leukocytes, and monocytes at rest were significantly higher than in inexperienced subjects. In experienced female winter swimmers, the plasma concentration of the soluble receptor for IL‐6 was significantly lower than in inexperienced female swimmers. In both groups, granulocytosis, haemoconcentration and significant increases in the concentrations of ADH, cortisol and IL‐6 were observed after the stimuli. However, the changes in the cortisol concentration were dramatically larger in habitual winter swimmers. A significant correlation was found between the delta values of cortisol and the basal concentrations of IL‐6. In cell cultures, the LPS‐induced release of IL‐1β and IL‐6 was higher at rest in the inexperienced winter swimmers. This release was dramatically suppressed after exposure to the stimuli in the inexperienced winter swimmers but tended to increase in the regular winter swimmers. These stresses appear to challenge both the neuro‐endocrine and the immune systems and the results indicate that adaptive mechanisms occur in habitual winter swimmers.
ISSN:0144-5979
1365-2281
DOI:10.1046/j.1365-2281.2000.00235.x