2005
DOI: 10.1080/13102818.2005.10817177
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Effects of Acute Aerobic and Anaerobic Exercise on Humoral Immune Factors in Elite Athletes

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Cited by 16 publications
(25 citation statements)
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“…The current study does not agree with the results of Karacabey et al (2005) since the researchers experimented on their participants after 13 kilometers of average and sub maximal running 5 .…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 94%
“…The current study does not agree with the results of Karacabey et al (2005) since the researchers experimented on their participants after 13 kilometers of average and sub maximal running 5 .…”
Section: Discussioncontrasting
confidence: 94%
“…As well as, intensity of activity in Ganga study was maximal but intensity of activity in the present study was sub maximal (70 to 75 percent of maximum heart rate) [10]. Aerobic activity in Karacabey study was 30 minutes running on treadmill with intensity 60 to 70 percent of maximal oxygen uptake that is very similar to the present study in terms of intensity and duration [18]. Factors like type, duration, intensity, and program of the exercise and the use of different subjects, various complex mechanisms including hormonal, metabolic and psychoneural stress are also known to have effects on the immune system and discrepancy between this study and other studies [32].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 72%
“…found a significant decrease in IgG (28%) after a 20 day rugby exercise, exercise six days a week with 2 hours a day [26]. Results of this study, however, is approximately consistent with the research of that suggesting the no significantly change in the level of serum IgG concentration after aerobic exercise [18]. As an example, Subjects in the Ganga study were marathon runners, their mean activity duration was 2.7 hour but activity duration in the present study was 30 minutes.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 60%
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“…Whether antibody concentrations decrease with age is not yet well established but the proportion of functional antibody does seem to decline [41] . Several crosssectional studies have demonstrated higher levels of serum immunoglobulins in highly physically active people when compared to sedentary controls [16,17] . Moderate exercise has also been shown to increase serum immunoglobulins [26] which in the elderly may have important eff ects since Igs are potent protective factors.…”
Section: Eff Ects Of Aerobic Conditioning On Salivary Iga and Plasma mentioning
confidence: 99%