La Trobe

Exertional heat stress promotes the presence of bacterial DNA in plasma: A counterbalanced randomised controlled trial

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posted on 2024-09-18, 02:30 authored by K Henningsen, R Henry, Stephanie Gaskell, Rebekah Alcock, A Mika, C Rauch, SN Cheuvront, P Blazy, R Kenefick, RJS Costa
Objectives: The primary aim was to explore the impact of exertional-heat stress (EHS) promoted exercise-associated bacteraemia. A secondary aim was to examine if an amino acid beverage (AAB) intervention may mitigate exercise-associated bacteraemia. Design: Counterbalanced randomised control trial. Methods: Twenty endurance trained male participants completed two randomised EHS trials. On one occasion, participants consumed a 237 mL AAB twice daily for 7 days prior, immediately before and every 20 min during EHS (2 h running at 60 % V̇O2max in 35 °C). On the other occasion, a water volume control (CON) equivalent was consumed. Whole blood samples were collected pre- and immediately post-EHS, and were analysed for plasma DNA concentration by fluorometer quantification after microbial extraction, and bacterial relative abundance by next generation 16s rRNA gene sequencing. Results: Increased concentration of microbial DNA in plasma pre- to post-EHS was observed on CON (pre-EHS 0.014 ng/μL, post-EHS 0.039 ng/μL) (p < 0.001) and AAB (pre-EHS 0.015 ng/μL, post-EHS 0.031 ng/μL) (p < 0.001). The magnitude of change from pre- to post-exercise on AAB was 40 % lower, but no significant difference was observed versus CON (p = 0.455). Predominant bacterial groups identified included: phyla-Proteobacteria (88.0 %), family-Burkholderiaceae (59.1 %), and genus-Curvibacter (58.6 %). No significant variation in absolute and relative change in α-diversity and relative abundance for phyla, family, and genus bacterial groups was observed in AAB versus CON. Conclusions: The increased presence of microbial-bacterial DNA in systemic circulation in response to EHS appears positive in all participants. An amino acid beverage supplementation period prior to and consumption during EHS did not provide significant attenuation of EHS-associated bacteraemia.

Funding

The current study was supported by Entrinsic Biosciences, LLC. Researchers within EBS (SC, RK, and PB) were involved in the development of the experimental protocol. However, the funder was not involved in undertaking the experimental procedures, data or sample collection, analysis or interpretation of results. No restrictions were placed on the reporting of findings.

History

Publication Date

2024-09-01

Journal

Journal of Science and Medicine in Sport

Volume

27

Issue

9

Pagination

8p. (p. 610-617)

Publisher

Elsevier

ISSN

1440-2440

Rights Statement

© 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd on behalf of Sports Medicine Australia. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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