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Journal ArticleDOI

The changes in hematocrit, hemoglobin, plasma volume and proteins during and after different types of exercise.

TLDR
The ratio of hemoglobin to hematocrit remained unchanged during and after all types of exercise, and the changes in hemoconcentration, plasma volume, and plasma protein concentration reached the highest changes in the first 15 min of exercise.
Abstract
A group of 7 healthy males was studied after maximal exercise and during and after prolonged exercise of two types (approximately at 40 and 67% of their $$\dot V$$ O2 max). Hematocrit, plasma proteins concentration, and hemoglobin were followed. Relative changes of plasma volume and total content of plasma protein were calculated from hematocrit changes. The mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration was obtained by dividing hemoglobin by hematocrit. After maximal exercise, hemoconcentration with concomitant decrease of plasma volume (−13.0%) was found, with a corresponding increase in protein concentration (+12.9%) and without any protein content changes. Later normalisation at the 30th min of the recovery phase was shown. During prolonged submaximal exercise (67% of $$\dot V$$ O2 max) the changes in hemoconcentration, plasma volume (−7.1%), and plasma protein concentration (+6.9%) reached the highest changes in the first 15 min of exercise, and no decrease in protein content was observed. After them the spontaneous tendency to the normalisation was found. No changes were registered in prolonged mild exercise (40% of $$\dot V$$ O2 max). The ratio of hemoglobin to hematocrit remained unchanged during and after all types of exercise.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Intermittent claudication, exercise, and blood rheology.

TL;DR: The results confirm that physical training is clinically effective in patients suffering from claudication and suggest that training may be looked on as a form of "hemorrheologic therapy" suitable for increasing the fluidity of blood in patients with ischemic diseases.
Journal ArticleDOI

Blood Rheology: Key Parameters, Impact on Blood Flow, Role in Sickle Cell Disease and Effects of Exercise.

TL;DR: While acute, intense exercise may increase blood viscosity in healthy individuals, recent works conducted in sickle cell patients have shown that light cycling exercise did not cause dramatic changes in blood rheology, which could be beneficial for adequate blood flow and tissue perfusion.
Journal ArticleDOI

The influence of exercise-induced plasma volume changes on the interpretation of biochemical parameters used for monitoring exercise, training and sport.

TL;DR: It would, therefore, seem important to consider the influence of plasma volume changes on plasma solutes routinely measured for research, and as markers of training adaptation, prior to arriving at conclusions and recommendations based purely on their measured plasma level.
Journal ArticleDOI

Haemorheology in exercise and training.

TL;DR: Limited evidence indicates that the viscosities of whole blood and plasma increase in response to a variety of exercise protocols, and the low haematocrit values in trained athletes represent a hydration condition rather than iron stores deficiency.
Journal ArticleDOI

Erythrocytic system under the influence of physical exercise and training.

Zbigniew Szygula
- 01 Sep 1990 - 
TL;DR: Among many possible causes which may bring about the development of sports anaemia the most commonly recognised are: postexercise plasma expansion, intensified haemolysis during physical effort, iron deficiency, losses of erythrocytes by the way of bleeding into the digestive and urinary systems and also some disturbances in erythropoiesis.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Circulatory response to prolonged severe exercise.

TL;DR: Four subjects worked on a treadmill or a bicycle ergometer for 180 min at oxygen uptakes of 75% of the individual's max Vo2; after 90 min rest, the exercise was resumed and a maximal work load was calculated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Changes in total plasma content of electrolytes and proteins with maximal exercise.

TL;DR: The results obtained from six human subjects indicated that in comparison to preexercise values there was a net decrease in total content of plasma protein, sodium, and chloride in the first 2 min of the postexercise period, due primarily to a significant loss of plasma fluid.
Journal ArticleDOI

Disproportional changes in hematocrit, plasma volume, and proteins during exercise and bed rest.

TL;DR: With prolonged submaximal exercise there was a net gain in plasma protein, which contributes to stabilization of the vascular volume, and this loss of plasma protein probably plays an important role in recumbency hypovolemia.
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