Abstract

The incisive evaluation of psychological stress may be required to determine the exercise performance of stressed hosts. We investigated objective markers of psychological stress that reflect exercise performance, focusing on the neutrophil function. We used murine water-immersion restraint (WIR) stress for our assessments. After receiving WIR for 1 or 2 h, mice were exercised on an airtight treadmill that monitors their respiratory exchange ratio. The neutrophil function was analyzed after WIR stress. Although the control mice (without WIR) showed good combustion of both carbohydrates and lipids as energy sources during treadmill exercise, mice that underwent 2-h WIR did not combust carbohydrates or lipids effectively, drastically reducing their performance. In contrast, the 1-h WIR mice showed carbohydrate combustion (albeit a slow response) but did not use lipids for energy, thereby running longer than the 2-h WIR mice but shorter than the control mice. The bactericidal activity of neutrophils, but not their superoxide production or microsphere-phagocytic activity, was significantly reduced by 1-h WIR and further reduced by 2-h WIR, indicating a significant association between WIR stress and exercise performance. The neutrophil bactericidal activity may be a good indicator of psychological stress and a useful tool for precisely assessing exercise performance.

Highlights

  • Psychological stress has a negative impact on a wide range of physical health outcomes

  • Total energy expenditure (EE) during treadmill exercise until exhaustion was markedly decreased in the 1-h water-immersion restraint (WIR) group and was further reduced in the 2-h WIR group (Fig. 1C)

  • The WIR model is widely used as a rodent model of psychological stress[10,11,15,16,17,18,19,20,21]

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Summary

Introduction

Psychological stress has a negative impact on a wide range of physical health outcomes. The precise evaluation of psychological stress in athletes may be important for allowing them to be in their best condition at such events and to elicit their best exercise performance. It is quite difficult to objectively and precisely evaluate psychological stress. Www.nature.com/scientificreports of psychological stress, they are basically produced to protect the hosts from harmful stimuli. Psychological stress reportedly reduced the bactericidal activity of neutrophils in children[13]. An incisive and objective marker of psychological stress that reflects exercise performance would be quite useful for athlete conditioning. If psychological stress can be precisely evaluated based on the neutrophil bactericidal activity, it may be a useful tool for effectively eliciting exercise performance in hosts

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