Sprint interval and sprint continuous training increases circulating CD34+ cells and cardio-respiratory fitness in young healthy women.

The improvement of vascular health in the exercising limb can be attained by sprint interval training (SIT). However, the effects on systemic vascular function and on circulating angiogenic cells (CACs) which may contribute to endothelial repair have not been investigated. Additionally, a comparison...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Emma Harris, Mark Rakobowchuk, Karen M Birch
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4181657?pdf=render
id doaj-052da96de49a4a24ad7112bf5eff9816
record_format Article
spelling doaj-052da96de49a4a24ad7112bf5eff98162020-11-24T21:50:03ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-0199e10872010.1371/journal.pone.0108720Sprint interval and sprint continuous training increases circulating CD34+ cells and cardio-respiratory fitness in young healthy women.Emma HarrisMark RakobowchukKaren M BirchThe improvement of vascular health in the exercising limb can be attained by sprint interval training (SIT). However, the effects on systemic vascular function and on circulating angiogenic cells (CACs) which may contribute to endothelial repair have not been investigated. Additionally, a comparison between SIT and sprint continuous training (SCT) which is less time committing has not been made.12 women (22±2 yrs) completed 12 sessions of either SIT (n = 6) or work-matched SCT (n = 6) on 3 days/week. Pre and post-training assessments included brachial artery endothelial function and peripheral blood analysis for CAC number (CD34+/CD34+CD45dim). CAC function was measured by migration and adhesion assays. Cardio-respiratory fitness, carotid arterial stiffness and carotid-radial and brachial-foot pulse wave velocity (PWV) were also evaluated.CD34+ CACs increased following training in both groups but CD34+CD45dim did not (Pre CD34+: 40±21/105 leukocytes, Post CD34+: 56±24/105 leukocytes, main time effect p<0.05). Brachial artery flow-mediated dilation (FMD) increased following SIT but SCT had no effect (Pre SIT: 5.0±3.4%, Post SIT: 5.9±3.0%, Pre SCT: 7.2±2.7%, Post SCT: 6.5±2.9%; group x time interaction p = 0.08). [Formula: see text] increased in both training groups (Pre: 34.6±4.6 ml•kg•ml-1, Post: 36.9±5.4 ml•kg•ml-1, main time effect p<0.05). CAC function, carotid arterial stiffness and PWV did not change after training (p>0.05).SCT involving little time commitment is comparable to SIT in increasing CD34+ cell number and [Formula: see text]. An increased mobilisation of CD34+ CACs suggests that sprint training may be an effective method to enhance vascular repair.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4181657?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Emma Harris
Mark Rakobowchuk
Karen M Birch
spellingShingle Emma Harris
Mark Rakobowchuk
Karen M Birch
Sprint interval and sprint continuous training increases circulating CD34+ cells and cardio-respiratory fitness in young healthy women.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Emma Harris
Mark Rakobowchuk
Karen M Birch
author_sort Emma Harris
title Sprint interval and sprint continuous training increases circulating CD34+ cells and cardio-respiratory fitness in young healthy women.
title_short Sprint interval and sprint continuous training increases circulating CD34+ cells and cardio-respiratory fitness in young healthy women.
title_full Sprint interval and sprint continuous training increases circulating CD34+ cells and cardio-respiratory fitness in young healthy women.
title_fullStr Sprint interval and sprint continuous training increases circulating CD34+ cells and cardio-respiratory fitness in young healthy women.
title_full_unstemmed Sprint interval and sprint continuous training increases circulating CD34+ cells and cardio-respiratory fitness in young healthy women.
title_sort sprint interval and sprint continuous training increases circulating cd34+ cells and cardio-respiratory fitness in young healthy women.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description The improvement of vascular health in the exercising limb can be attained by sprint interval training (SIT). However, the effects on systemic vascular function and on circulating angiogenic cells (CACs) which may contribute to endothelial repair have not been investigated. Additionally, a comparison between SIT and sprint continuous training (SCT) which is less time committing has not been made.12 women (22±2 yrs) completed 12 sessions of either SIT (n = 6) or work-matched SCT (n = 6) on 3 days/week. Pre and post-training assessments included brachial artery endothelial function and peripheral blood analysis for CAC number (CD34+/CD34+CD45dim). CAC function was measured by migration and adhesion assays. Cardio-respiratory fitness, carotid arterial stiffness and carotid-radial and brachial-foot pulse wave velocity (PWV) were also evaluated.CD34+ CACs increased following training in both groups but CD34+CD45dim did not (Pre CD34+: 40±21/105 leukocytes, Post CD34+: 56±24/105 leukocytes, main time effect p<0.05). Brachial artery flow-mediated dilation (FMD) increased following SIT but SCT had no effect (Pre SIT: 5.0±3.4%, Post SIT: 5.9±3.0%, Pre SCT: 7.2±2.7%, Post SCT: 6.5±2.9%; group x time interaction p = 0.08). [Formula: see text] increased in both training groups (Pre: 34.6±4.6 ml•kg•ml-1, Post: 36.9±5.4 ml•kg•ml-1, main time effect p<0.05). CAC function, carotid arterial stiffness and PWV did not change after training (p>0.05).SCT involving little time commitment is comparable to SIT in increasing CD34+ cell number and [Formula: see text]. An increased mobilisation of CD34+ CACs suggests that sprint training may be an effective method to enhance vascular repair.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4181657?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT emmaharris sprintintervalandsprintcontinuoustrainingincreasescirculatingcd34cellsandcardiorespiratoryfitnessinyounghealthywomen
AT markrakobowchuk sprintintervalandsprintcontinuoustrainingincreasescirculatingcd34cellsandcardiorespiratoryfitnessinyounghealthywomen
AT karenmbirch sprintintervalandsprintcontinuoustrainingincreasescirculatingcd34cellsandcardiorespiratoryfitnessinyounghealthywomen
_version_ 1725885691214168064