pubmed:abstractText |
Plasma levels of lipoprotein(a), total cholesterol, triglycerides, HDL cholesterol, LDL cholesterol, apoprotein A1 and apoprotein B were assessed in 10 healthy, untrained volunteers subjected to a bicycle ergometric exercise equal to 50% of individual VO2max, followed by increasing loads until muscular exhaustion. Blood samples were taken before the exercise, immediately afterwards and then at 12-hourly intervals for a 72 hours period. Subsequently, the same parameters were evaluated for 8 long-distance runners during the XXIII New York Marathon, with blood samples being taken before and after the race, and then after one month of detraining. After the exercise, lipoprotein(a) in untrained subjects began to decrease significantly from the 24th hour on and remained lower than baseline levels up till the 72nd hour. After detraining, lipoprotein(a) in marathon runners increased significantly both with respect to basal values and especially to post-race values. Modifications of the other metabolic parameters evaluated in both tests were negligible and predictable. In the two groups of subjects examined, no correlation was found between lipoprotein (a) and the anthropometrical data and metabolic parameters considered.
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