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Plasma catecholamine responses to exercise after training with beta-adrenergic blockade
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Plasma catecholamine responses to exercise after training with beta-adrenergic blockade

Eugene E Wolfel, William R Hiatt, H. L. Brammell, Victoria Travis and Lawrence D Horwitz
Journal of applied physiology (1985), Vol.68(2), pp.586-593
02/01/1990
DOI: 10.1152/jappl.1990.68.2.586
PMID: 1969402

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Abstract

Exercise training has been shown to decrease plasma norepinephrine (NE) and epinephrine (EPI) levels during absolute levels of submaximal exercise, which may reflect alterations in sympathetic tone as a result of training. To determine if beta-adrenergic blockade altered these changes in the plasma concentration of catecholamines with exercise conditioning, we studied the effects of beta-adrenergic blockade on NE and EPI at rest and during exercise in 24 healthy, male subjects after a 6-wk exercise training program. The subjects were randomized to placebo (P), atenolol 50 mg twice daily (A), and nadolol 40 mg twice daily (N). There were no changes in resting NE and EPI compared with pretraining values in any subject group. During the same absolute level of submaximal exercise NE decreased in P and A but was unchanged in N, whereas EPI decreased only in P. At maximal exercise all three groups developed significant increases in NE after training that paralleled increases in systolic blood pressure. EPI at maximal exercise increased after training with N but was unchanged with P or A. These training-induced changes in plasma catecholamine levels were masked or blunted when the A and N groups were studied while still on medication after training. Thus beta-adrenergic blockade has important effects on adaptations of the sympathetic nervous system to training, especially during submaximal exercise.

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