4.5 Article

WHOLE BLOOD COAGULATION AND PLATELET ACTIVATION IN THE ATHLETE: A COMPARISON OF MARATHON, TRIATHLON AND LONG DISTANCE CYCLING

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF MEDICAL RESEARCH
Volume 15, Issue 2, Pages 59-65

Publisher

I HOLZAPFEL VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1186/2047-783X-15-2-59

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Introduction: Serious thrombembolic events occur in Otherwise healthy marathon athletes during competition. We tested the hypothesis that during heavy endurance sports coagulation and platelets are activated depending on the type of endurance sport with respect no its running, fraction. Materials and Methods: 68 healthy athletes participating in marathon (MAR, running 42 km, n = 24), triathlon (TRI, swimming 2.5 km + cycling 90 km + running 21 km, n = 22), and long distance cycling (CYC, 151 km, n 22) were included in the study Blood samples were taken before and immediately after completion of competition to perform rotational thrombelastometry. We assessed coagulation time (CT), maximum clot firmness (MCF) after intrinsically activation and fibrin polymerization (FIBTEM). Furthermore, platelet aggregation was tested after activation with ADP and thrombin activating peptide 6 (TRAP) by using multiple platelet function analyzer. Results: Complete data sets were obtained in 58 athletes (MAR: n = 20, TRI: n = 19, CYC: n = 19). CT significantly decreased in all groups (MAR -9.9%, TRI -8.3%, CYC -7.4%) without differences between groups. In parallel, MCF (MAR +7.4%, TRI +6.1%, CYC +8.3%) and fibrin polymerization (MAR +14.7%, TRI +6.1%, CYC +8.3%) were significantly increased in all groups. However, platelets were only activated during MAR and TRI as indicated by increased creased AUC during TRAP-activation (MAR + 15.8%) and increased AUC during ADP-activation in MAR in MAR (+50.3%) and TRI (+57.5%). Discussion: While coagulation is activated during physical activity irrespective of type we observed significant platelet activation only during marathon and to a lesser extent during triathlon. We speculate that prolonged running may increase platelet activity, possibly, due to mechanical alteration. Thus, particularly prolonged running may increase the risk of thrombembolic incidents in running athletes.

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