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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Creatine kinase monitoring in sport medicine

TLDR
It is probably safe to counsel athletes with suspected myopathy to continue to undertake physical activity at a lower intensity, so as to prevent muscle damage from high intensity exercise and allow ample recovery to favour adequate recovery.
Abstract
Areas of general agreement: Total creatine kinase (CK) levels depend on age, gender, race, muscle mass, physical activity and climatic condition. High levels of serum CK in apparently healthy subjects may be correlated with physical training status, as they depend on sarcomeric damage: strenuous exercise that damages skeletal muscle cells results in increased total serum CK. The highest postexercise serum enzyme activities are found after prolonged exercise such as ultradistance marathon running or weight-bearing exercises and downhill running, which include eccentric muscular contractions. Total serum CK activity is markedly elevated for 24 h after the exercise bout and, when patients rest, it gradually returns to basal levels. Persistently increased serum CK levels are occasionally encountered in healthy individuals and are also markedly increased in the pre-clinical stages of muscle diseases. Areas that are controversial: Some authors, studying subjects with high levels of CK at rest, observed that, years later, subjects developed muscle weakness and suggested that early myopathy may be asymptomatic. Others demonstrated that, in most of these patients, hyperCKemia probably does not imply disease. In many instances, the diagnosis is not formulated following routine examination with the patients at rest, as symptoms become manifest only after exercise. Some authors think that strength training seems to be safe for patients with myopathy, even though the evidence for routine exercise prescription is still insufficient. Others believe that, in these conditions, intense prolonged exercise may produce negative effects, as it does not induce the physiological muscle adaptations to physical training given the continuous loss of muscle proteins. Growing points: High CK serum levels in athletes following absolute rest and without any further predisposing factors should prompt a full diagnostic workup with special regards to signs of muscle weakness or other simple signs that, in both athletes and sedentary subjects, are not always promptly evident. These signs may indicate subclinical muscle disease, which training loads may evidence through the onset of profound fatigue. It is probably safe to counsel athletes with suspected myopathy to continue to undertake physical activity at a lower intensity, so as to prevent muscle damage from high intensity exercise and allow ample recovery to favour adequate recovery.

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Citations
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Monitoring the athlete training response: subjective self-reported measures trump commonly used objective measures: a systematic review.

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Creatine-Kinase- and Exercise-Related Muscle Damage Implications for Muscle Performance and Recovery

TL;DR: Current evidence and opinion relating to the release of CK from skeletal muscle in response to physical activity are examined to examine if elevated concentrations are a health concern and if acceptable upper limits of normal CK levels may need to be reset.
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Absence of Dystrophin Disrupts Skeletal Muscle Signaling: Roles of Ca2+, Reactive Oxygen Species, and Nitric Oxide in the Development of Muscular Dystrophy

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References
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TL;DR: Eccentric physical exercise (downhill running) did not result in skeletal muscle inflammation 48 h post exercise, despite DOMS and increased CK, suggesting Repeated physical training may alter the content of inflammatory factors in the epimysium and thus reduce DOMS.
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Effect of marathon running on hematologic and biochemical laboratory parameters, including cardiac markers.

TL;DR: The increase in WBC counts was due mainly to neutrophilia and monocytosis, with a relative decrease in circulating lymphocytes, consistent with an inflammatory reaction to tissue injury.
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