The Effect of Exercise on Urinary Gamma-Glutamyltransferase and Protein Levels in Elite Female Karate Athletes

authors:

avatar Nader Shavandi 1 , avatar Abolfazl Samiei 1 , * , avatar Reza Afshar 2 , avatar Abbas Saremi 1 , avatar Rahman Sheikhhoseini 1

Department of Sports Physiology, Arak University, Arak, Iran
Department of Nephrology, Shahed University, Tehran, Iran

how to cite: Shavandi N, Samiei A, Afshar R, Saremi A, Sheikhhoseini R. The Effect of Exercise on Urinary Gamma-Glutamyltransferase and Protein Levels in Elite Female Karate Athletes. Asian J Sports Med. 2012;3(1):34724. https://doi.org/10.5812/asjsm.34724.

Abstract

Purpose:

Post exercise proteinuria and increased urinary Gamma-Glutamyl transferase (GGT) levels can be indicative of exercise-induced renal damage. The aim of this investigation is to study the effect of one session of intensive training on renal damage markers and compare their values to those 6 hours after training.

Methods:

In this cross-sectional study with pre- and post-test design, 10 elite volunteer female athletes were selected and participated in one training session (2 hours). Urine samples were collected before training, one hour after training, and 6 hours after training. Urinary protein (Pr), creatinine (Cr), and GGT values were measured through laboratory methods and then Pr/Cr and GGT/Cr ratios were computed.

Results:

There were significant differences between values of protein, GGT and Creatinine in the three sampling phases (P<0.05). However, no significant differences were observed between values for GGT/Cr and Pr/Cr ratio. There were significant differences between the mean values of Creatinine, protein and GGT within pre-exercise and 1 hour post-exercise and within 1 hour post-exercise and 6 hours post-exercise (P<0.05).

Conclusion:

It seems that a session of karate training does not result in renal damage and athletes can continue training after 6 hours.

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