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Hormonal Responses to Exercise Dr. Kyle Coffey. Week 4&5. Blood Hormone Concentration. Hormones only affect tissue with specific receptors and trigger events at the cell Concentration determines the magnitude of the effect at the tissue level Determinant Factors
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Blood Hormone Concentration • Hormones only affect tissue with specific receptors and trigger events at the cell • Concentrationdetermines the magnitude of the effect at the tissue level • Determinant Factors • Rate of secretion of hormone from endocrine gland • Rate of metabolism or excretion of hormone • Quantity of transport protein • Changes in plasma volume • With exercise: concentration changes!
Mechanism of Hormone Reaction • Hormones modify cellular activity by: • Alteration of membrane transport • Activate carrier molecules in or near membrane to increase movement of substrates or ions from outside to inside cell • Insulin • Altering activity of DNA to increase protein synthesis • Lipids diffuse across membrane easily, bind in cytoplasm • Steroid hormones • Activation of “second messengers” via G-Protein • Do not cross membrane (not permeable) • Use Cyclic AMP, Ca++,Inositol triphosphate, Diacylglycerol • Insulin is the odd ball: does not utilize second messengers
Hormones: Regulation & Action • Hormones are secreted from endocrine glands • Hypothalamus and pituitary glands • Thyroid and parathyroid glands • Adrenal glands • Pancreas • Testes and ovaries
Hypothalamus and Pituitary Gland • Hypothalamus • Controls secretions from pituitary gland • Anterior Pituitary Gland • Adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) • Follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) • Luteinizing hormone (LH) • Melanocyte-stimulating hormone (MSH) • Thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) • Growth hormone (GH) • Prolactin • Posterior Pituitary Gland • Oxytocin • Antidiuretic hormone (ADH)
Growth Hormone • Stimulates release of insulin-like growth factors (IGFs) • Essential for growth of all tissues • Amino acid uptake and stimulates protein synthesis • Long bone growth • Used to treat childhood dwarfism • Also used by athletes and elderly • Spares plasma glucose (supports Cortisol) • Opposes insulin: maintains plasma glucose • Increases gluconeogenesis (new glucose in liver) • Mobilizes fatty acids from adipose tissue • What happens with exercise?
Growth Hormone Supplementation • No evidence that GH promotes strength gains • Protein synthesis is collagen, not contractile protein • 2010: Associations of exercise-induced hormone profiles and gains in strength and hypertrophy in a large cohort after weight training • 2010: Elevations in ostensibly anabolic hormones with resistance exercise enhance neither training-induced muscle hypertrophy nor strength of the elbow flexors • Improve healing capacity? • 2009: Growth hormone stimulates the collagen synthesis in human tendon and skeletal muscle without affecting myofibrillar protein synthesis
Growth Hormone Discussion • Commonly utilized substance – difficult to obtain? • What is the impact for us as EPs? • Is this performance enhancing or solely a healing benefit? • Impact with young children or adolescents? Not skeletally mature? • Video: HGH on the rise
Posterior Pituitary Gland • Antidiuretic hormone (ADH) • Reduces water loss from the body to maintain plasma volume • Favors reabsorption of water from kidney tubules to capillaries • Release stimulated by high plasma osmolality and low plasma volume • Exercise • Increases during exercise >60% VO2 max • To maintain plasma volume • Normal exercise: osmolality increases, plasma volume decreases • WHY?!
Adrenal Medulla • Secretes the catecholamines • Epinephrine (E) and norepinephrine (NE) • Fast-acting hormones • Part of “fight or flight”response • Increase HR, and maintenance of BP • Maintenance of plasma glucose concentration
Epinephrine and Norepinephrine • Increase linearly during exercise • Favor the mobilization of FFA and maintenance of plasma glucose • Decreased plasma levels in response to exercise bout • Parallels reduction in glucose mobilization What does linear increase mean?!
Plasma Catecholamines Responses to Exercise Following Training
Adrenal Cortex • Mineralcorticoids • Aldosterone • Regulation of blood pressure • Glucocorticoids • Cortisol • Regulation of plasma glucose (supported by GH) through protein breakdown and use of FFAs as fuel
Aldosterone • Control of Na+ reabsorption and K+ secretion • Na+/H2O balance • Regulation of blood volume and blood pressure • Part of renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system • All three hormones increase during exercise • Stimulated by: • Increased K+concentration • Where does this occur with exercise? • Decreased plasma volume • When does this occur with exercise?
Why should EPs care about this? • Angiotensin II • Powerful vasoconstrictor stimulated by increased SNS activity • When does this occur? • Effect? • ACE inhibitors • Reduce production of angiotensin • Common medication class used to treat HTN • Medications end in –pril (i.e. Lisinopril) • Impact on exercise performance? • Signs and symptoms?
Cortisol • Maintenance of plasma glucose • Promotes protein breakdown for gluconeogenesis • Stimulates FFA mobilization • Stimulates glucose synthesis • Blocks uptake of glucose into cells (opposes insulin) • Promotes the use of free fatty acids as fuel • Stimulated by: • Stress • Exercise • Decrease during low-intensity exercise • Why? • Increase during high-intensity exercise • Above ~60% VO2 max
Pancreas • Secretes: • Insulin (from cells in islets of Langerhans) • Promotes the storage of glucose, amino acids, and fats • Glucagon (from cells in islets of Langerhans) • Promotes the mobilization of fatty acids and glucose • Somatostatin(from cells in islets of Langerhans) • Controls rate of entry of nutrients into the circulation
Training Effects • Trained subjects during exercise • More rapid decrease in plasma insulin • Increase in plasma glucagon
Effect of Epinephrine and Norepinephrine on Insulin and Glucagon Secretion
Testosterone • Released from testes • Anabolic steroid • Promotes tissue (muscle) building • Exercise performance enhancement
Muscle: Endocrine Gland • Skeletal muscle produces myokines (signaling molecules) when it contracts • Stimulate glucose uptake and fatty acid oxidation • Promote blood vessel growth in muscle (training adaptation) • Promote liver glucose production and triglyceride breakdown • Regular exercise promotes anti-inflammatory environment through myokine release • Reduction in chronic inflammation and reduced risk of heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and certain cancers
Hormonal Control of Substrate Mobilization During Exercise • Muscle glycogen utilization • Related to exercise intensity • High-intensity exercise results in greater and more rapid glycogen depletion • Muscle then liver • Plasma epinephrine is a powerful simulator of glycogenolysis • High-intensity exercise results in greater increases in plasma epinephrine
Link • Interval Training and Blood Glucose