Acute exercise does not induce an acute phase response (APR) in Standardbred trotters

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Standard

Acute exercise does not induce an acute phase response (APR) in Standardbred trotters. / Kristensen, Lena; Buhl, Rikke; Nostell, Katarina; Bak, Lars; Petersen, Ellen; Lindholm, Maria; Jacobsen, Stine.

I: Canadian Journal of Veterinary Research, Bind 78, 2014, s. 97-102.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Kristensen, L, Buhl, R, Nostell, K, Bak, L, Petersen, E, Lindholm, M & Jacobsen, S 2014, 'Acute exercise does not induce an acute phase response (APR) in Standardbred trotters', Canadian Journal of Veterinary Research, bind 78, s. 97-102.

APA

Kristensen, L., Buhl, R., Nostell, K., Bak, L., Petersen, E., Lindholm, M., & Jacobsen, S. (2014). Acute exercise does not induce an acute phase response (APR) in Standardbred trotters. Canadian Journal of Veterinary Research, 78, 97-102.

Vancouver

Kristensen L, Buhl R, Nostell K, Bak L, Petersen E, Lindholm M o.a. Acute exercise does not induce an acute phase response (APR) in Standardbred trotters. Canadian Journal of Veterinary Research. 2014;78:97-102.

Author

Kristensen, Lena ; Buhl, Rikke ; Nostell, Katarina ; Bak, Lars ; Petersen, Ellen ; Lindholm, Maria ; Jacobsen, Stine. / Acute exercise does not induce an acute phase response (APR) in Standardbred trotters. I: Canadian Journal of Veterinary Research. 2014 ; Bind 78. s. 97-102.

Bibtex

@article{610d1d3275cc4fffb4876fdb0a8d6409,
title = "Acute exercise does not induce an acute phase response (APR) in Standardbred trotters",
abstract = "The purpose of the study was to investigate whether acute strenuous exercise (1600- to 2500-m race) would elicit an acute phase response (APR) in Standardbred trotters. Blood levels of several inflammatory markers [serum amyloid A (SAA), haptoglobin, fibrinogen, white blood cell count (WBC), and iron], muscle enzymes [creatinine kinase (CK) and aspartate transaminase (AST)], and hemoglobin were assessed in 58 Standardbred trotters before and after racing. Hemoglobin levels increased and iron levels decreased 12 to 14 h after racing and haptoglobin concentrations, white blood cell counts, and iron levels were decreased 2 and/or 7 d after racing. Concentrations of CK, AST, SAA, and fibrinogen were unaltered in response to racing. Acute strenuous exercise did not elicit an acute phase reaction. The observed acute increase in hemoglobin levels and decreases in haptoglobin and iron levels may have been caused by exercise-induced hemolysis, which indicates that horses might experience a condition similar to athlete{\textquoteright}s anemia in humans. The pathogenesis and clinical implications of the hematological and blood-biochemical changes elicited by acute exercise in Standardbred trotters in the present study warrant further investigation",
keywords = "Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences, Horses, equine, Veterinary medicine, Sports Medicine, Inflammation, Acute phase proteins, Serum amyloid A",
author = "Lena Kristensen and Rikke Buhl and Katarina Nostell and Lars Bak and Ellen Petersen and Maria Lindholm and Stine Jacobsen",
year = "2014",
language = "English",
volume = "78",
pages = "97--102",
journal = "Canadian Journal of Veterinary Research",
issn = "0830-9000",
publisher = "Canadian Veterinary Medical Association",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Acute exercise does not induce an acute phase response (APR) in Standardbred trotters

AU - Kristensen, Lena

AU - Buhl, Rikke

AU - Nostell, Katarina

AU - Bak, Lars

AU - Petersen, Ellen

AU - Lindholm, Maria

AU - Jacobsen, Stine

PY - 2014

Y1 - 2014

N2 - The purpose of the study was to investigate whether acute strenuous exercise (1600- to 2500-m race) would elicit an acute phase response (APR) in Standardbred trotters. Blood levels of several inflammatory markers [serum amyloid A (SAA), haptoglobin, fibrinogen, white blood cell count (WBC), and iron], muscle enzymes [creatinine kinase (CK) and aspartate transaminase (AST)], and hemoglobin were assessed in 58 Standardbred trotters before and after racing. Hemoglobin levels increased and iron levels decreased 12 to 14 h after racing and haptoglobin concentrations, white blood cell counts, and iron levels were decreased 2 and/or 7 d after racing. Concentrations of CK, AST, SAA, and fibrinogen were unaltered in response to racing. Acute strenuous exercise did not elicit an acute phase reaction. The observed acute increase in hemoglobin levels and decreases in haptoglobin and iron levels may have been caused by exercise-induced hemolysis, which indicates that horses might experience a condition similar to athlete’s anemia in humans. The pathogenesis and clinical implications of the hematological and blood-biochemical changes elicited by acute exercise in Standardbred trotters in the present study warrant further investigation

AB - The purpose of the study was to investigate whether acute strenuous exercise (1600- to 2500-m race) would elicit an acute phase response (APR) in Standardbred trotters. Blood levels of several inflammatory markers [serum amyloid A (SAA), haptoglobin, fibrinogen, white blood cell count (WBC), and iron], muscle enzymes [creatinine kinase (CK) and aspartate transaminase (AST)], and hemoglobin were assessed in 58 Standardbred trotters before and after racing. Hemoglobin levels increased and iron levels decreased 12 to 14 h after racing and haptoglobin concentrations, white blood cell counts, and iron levels were decreased 2 and/or 7 d after racing. Concentrations of CK, AST, SAA, and fibrinogen were unaltered in response to racing. Acute strenuous exercise did not elicit an acute phase reaction. The observed acute increase in hemoglobin levels and decreases in haptoglobin and iron levels may have been caused by exercise-induced hemolysis, which indicates that horses might experience a condition similar to athlete’s anemia in humans. The pathogenesis and clinical implications of the hematological and blood-biochemical changes elicited by acute exercise in Standardbred trotters in the present study warrant further investigation

KW - Faculty of Health and Medical Sciences

KW - Horses

KW - equine

KW - Veterinary medicine

KW - Sports Medicine

KW - Inflammation

KW - Acute phase proteins

KW - Serum amyloid A

M3 - Journal article

VL - 78

SP - 97

EP - 102

JO - Canadian Journal of Veterinary Research

JF - Canadian Journal of Veterinary Research

SN - 0830-9000

ER -

ID: 119243119