Abstract

PurposeHeat stress exacerbates post-exercise hypotension (PEH) and cardiovascular disturbances from elevated body temperature may contribute to exertion-related incapacity. Mast cell degranulation and muscle mass are possible modifiers, though these hypotheses lack practical evidence. This study had three aims: (1) to characterise pre–post-responses in histamine and mast cell tryptase (MCT), (2) to investigate relationships between whole body muscle mass (WBMM) and changes in blood pressure post-marathon, (3) to identify any differences in incapacitated runners.Methods24 recreational runners were recruited and successfully completed the 2019 Brighton Marathon (COMPLETION). WBMM was measured at baseline. A further eight participants were recruited from incapacitated runners (COLLAPSE). Histamine, MCT, blood pressure, heart rate, body temperature and echocardiographic measures were taken before and after exercise (COMPLETION) and upon incapacitation (COLLAPSE).ResultsIn completion, MCT increased by nearly 50% from baseline (p = 0.0049), whereas histamine and body temperature did not vary (p > 0.946). Systolic (SBP), diastolic (DBP) and mean (MAP) arterial blood pressures and systemic vascular resistance (SVR) declined (p < 0.019). WBMM negatively correlated with Delta SBP (r = − 0.43, p = 0.046). For collapse versus completion, there were significant elevations in MCT (1.77 ± 0.25 μg/L vs 1.18 ± 0.43 μg/L, p = 0.001) and body temperature (39.8 ± 1.3 °C vs 36.2 ± 0.8 °C, p < 0.0001) with a non-significant rise in histamine (9.6 ± 17.9 μg/L vs 13.7 ± 33.9 μg/L, p = 0.107) and significantly lower MAP, DBP and SVR (p < 0.033).ConclusionThese data support the hypothesis that mast cell degranulation is a vasodilatory mechanism underlying PEH and exercise associated collapse. The magnitude of PEH is inversely proportional to the muscle mass and enhanced by concomitant body heating.

Highlights

  • Light headedness, faintness, dizziness or collapse are common causes for presentation to medical facilities during, and after, marathon races (Roberts 2000, 2007)

  • In the COMPLETION group, six participants were available to attend for further blood samples, mast cell tryptase (MCT) remained significantly elevated at 4 h (0.87 ± 0.32 μg/L) versus rested baseline (0.58 ± 0.33 μg) p = 0.040

  • The MCT remained elevated at 24 h (0.88 ± 042 μg/L) compared to baseline but this was not significant (p = 0.668)

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Summary

Introduction

Faintness, dizziness or collapse are common causes for presentation to medical facilities during, and after, marathon races (Roberts 2000, 2007). In healthy individuals, during exercise, blood pressure increases proportional to workload (Iellamo 2001) despite a sustained vasodilation observed within skeletal muscle(Harold Laughlin et al 2012; Halliwill et al 2013, 2015) demonstrated following whole body exercise and after exercising a smaller muscle mass(Halliwill et al 1996; Barrett-O’Keefe et al 2013). It is unknown if the whole body muscle mass (WBMM) (absolute and as a percentage of body mass) correlates with the degree of vasodilation, and subsequent post-exercise hypotension

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