Abstract

Karate is a Japanese martial arts system with potential physical and psychological benefits. However, karate has been scarcely investigated from a psychobiological perspective, and its effects on the immune system remain virtually unknown. We designed the present study with the aim of analyzing the effects of karate practice on immunological parameters. 27 healthy male volunteer subjects participated in the study, 15 in the experimental group and 12 in the control. Experimental subjects were all karate players who had practiced this martial art for a minimum of three years attending regular lessons at a karate training center, in the evening, two to three days per week. Blood samples for the quantification of immunological parameters (total leukocytes, neutrophils, monocytes, eosinophils, basophils, lymphocytes, IgG, IgA, and IgM) were taken in both groups. A t-test for independent groups was performed in each dependent variable; a value of p<0.05 was considered to be significant. Karate practitioners exhibited a significantly higher number of total leukocytes (p<0.02), monocytes (p<0.01), and lymphocytes (p<0.01), a higher percentage of monocytes (p<0.01), and greater serum concentrations of IgG (p<0.02) and IgM (p<0.01). Our findings show that long-term karate practice is related to a broad modulation of immune parameters, including total and specific leukocyte counts, as well as immunoglobulin concentrations. This peculiar immunomodulatory profile, apart from its psychobiological relevance, may have noteworthy clinical implications.

Highlights

  • Karate is a Japanese martial art [1] which is currently one of the most popular forms of martial arts worldwide [2, 3]

  • Differences were found in total leukocytes, monocytes, monocytes %, lymphocytes, IgG, and IgM, with these parameters being higher in the karate group

  • The main finding of the present research is that long-term karate practice is associated with a significant immunomodulatory action consisting of an increased number and/or percentage of some leukocytes, monocytes and lymphocytes, as well as higher concentrations of IgG and IgM

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Summary

Introduction

Karate is a Japanese martial art [1] which is currently one of the most popular forms of martial arts worldwide [2, 3]. It is practiced both as a form of self-defense as well as a discipline with potential physical and psychological benefits [4]. Karate has been found to be effective in helping subjects with very different conditions ranging between disruptive behavior [46], blindness [47], autism [48], and even spinal cord injury damage [49]

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