Jr. Hinton et al., ACUTE INTENSIVE INTERVAL TRAINING AND IN-VITRO T-LYMPHOCYTE FUNCTION, International journal of sports medicine, 18(2), 1997, pp. 130-135
Five male endurance-trained runners completed an interval running sess
ion of 15 x 1-min intervals at 95% VO(2)max. Venous blood samples were
collected pre-exercise and then immediately, 30- and 60-minutes post-
exercise. The response of cultures of total lymphocytes to mitogen (ph
ytohaemagglutinin) were significantly reduced immediately after exerci
se, but returned to resting levels by 30-min of recovery. Conversely,
the mitogen response of cultures of pure T-lymphocytes (CD4(+) and CD8
(+) cells), separated using a magnetic separation technique, showed no
significant change during the exercise and recovery periods. These da
ta showed directly that there was no apparent change in the functional
capability of T-lymphocytes following an intensive interval training
session. Furthermore, there were significant changes in the compositio
n of the total lymphocyte cultures immediately post-exercise; increase
d numbers of natural killer (NK) cells (CD56(+)) and T-suppressor cell
s (CD8(+)) and decreased numbers of T-helper cells (CD4(+)). There wer
e also significant correlations between total mitogen response and the
composition of the cultured lymphocytes. These data indicated that th
e large increases in MK cells, relative to T-cells, following intensiv
e exercise, were the most likely cause of the reduced mitogen response
of total lymphocyte cultures.