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- Title
The effect of vigorous running and cycling on serum COMP, lubricin, and femoral cartilage thickness: a pilot study.
- Authors
Roberts, Harry; Moore, Jonathan; Griffith-McGeever, Claire; Fortes, Matthew; Thom, Jeanette; Roberts, Harry M; Moore, Jonathan P; Griffith-McGeever, Claire L; Fortes, Matthew B; Thom, Jeanette M
- Abstract
<bold>Purpose: </bold>Our aim was to investigate lubricin, cartilage oligomeric matrix protein (COMP), and femoral cartilage deformation in response to different biomechanical loading of the knee joint (running vs cycling).<bold>Methods: </bold>Serum lubricin and COMP concentrations (enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay), and femoral cartilage thickness (suprapatellar transverse ultrasonography) were determined in 11 male runners (age: 40 ± 6 years; weight: 76 ± 8 kg) and 11 male cyclists (35 ± 12 years; 75 ± 5 kg) at baseline, immediately after, and 30 min after vigorous exercise (time trial: 10-km run or 25-km cycle).<bold>Results: </bold>At baseline, lubricin (runners: 104.0 ± 19.8 ng/ml; cyclists: 119.1 ± 23.9 ng/ml) and COMP (runners: 804.1 ± 87.5 ng/ml; cyclists: 693.0 ± 84.7 ng/ml) did not significantly differ; however, vigorous exercise was accompanied by an increase in lubricin (cyclists: 39.4 %; p < 0.05; runners: 56.9 %; p < 0.05) and COMP (cyclists: 32.1 %; p < 0.05; runners: 14.2 %; p = 0.14) that returned toward baseline following 30 min of rest (p < 0.05). No between-group differences were observed for baseline cartilage thickness at the intercondyle notch, medial condyle, and lateral condyle, and vigorous exercise did not result in significant change for either group.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>In the absence of ultrasonographic knee cartilage deformation, the response of serum lubricin and COMP following acute vigorous exercise indicates an increase in joint lubrication and cartilage metabolism, respectively, which appears largely independent of exercise modality.
- Subjects
PILOT projects; CARTILAGE; LIGAMENTS; CONNECTIVE tissues; EAR cartilage molding; CARTILAGE fractures; MICROFRACTURE surgery; CARTILAGE regeneration; KNEE physiology; FEMUR physiology; ANTHROPOMETRY; ARTICULAR cartilage; COMPARATIVE studies; CYCLING; EXERCISE; GLYCOPROTEINS; RESEARCH methodology; MEDICAL cooperation; PROTEINS; RESEARCH; RUNNING; EVALUATION research; RANDOMIZED controlled trials; ANATOMY; PHYSIOLOGY
- Publication
European Journal of Applied Physiology, 2016, Vol 116, Issue 8, p1467
- ISSN
1439-6319
- Publication type
journal article
- DOI
10.1007/s00421-016-3404-0