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dc.creatorChatzinikolaou, A.en
dc.creatorDraganidis, D.en
dc.creatorAvloniti, A.en
dc.creatorKaripidis, A.en
dc.creatorJamurtas, A. Z.en
dc.creatorSkevaki, C. L.en
dc.creatorTsoukas, D.en
dc.creatorSovatzidis, A.en
dc.creatorTheodorou, A.en
dc.creatorKambas, A.en
dc.creatorPapassotiriou, I.en
dc.creatorTaxildaris, K.en
dc.creatorFatouros, I.en
dc.date.accessioned2015-11-23T10:24:34Z
dc.date.available2015-11-23T10:24:34Z
dc.date.issued2014
dc.identifier10.1080/02640414.2013.865251
dc.identifier.issn0264-0414
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11615/26613
dc.description.abstractBasketball incorporates intense eccentric muscle activity that induces muscle microtrauma and an inflammatory response. This study investigated time-dependent inflammatory and performance responses during a weekly microcycle after a basketball match. Twenty elite-standard players underwent a trial that comprised a match followed by a 6-day simulated in-season microcycle. The trial was preceded by a control condition that did not have a match. Blood sampling and tests of maximal-intensity exercise performance and muscle damage occurred before each condition, immediately after the match and daily thereafter for 6 consecutive days. The match induced marked increases in heart rate, lactate, ammonia, glucose, non-esterified fatty acids and triglycerides. Performance deteriorated for 24-48h after the match, whereas knee flexor and extensor soreness increased for 48 and 24h post-match, respectively. Inflammatory (leukocytes, C-reactive protein, creatine kinase activity, adhesion molecules, cortisol, uric acid and cytokines) and oxidative stress (malondialdehyde, protein carbonyls, oxidised glutathione, antioxidant capacity, catalase and glutathione peroxidase) markers increased for ~24h and subsided thereafter. Reduced glutathione declined for 24h after exercise. These results suggest that a basketball match elicits moderate and relatively brief (~24-48h) inflammatory responses, is associated with marked but short-lived performance deterioration, but is less stressful than other intermittent-type sports.en
dc.sourceJournal of Sports Sciencesen
dc.source.uri<Go to ISI>://WOS:000333931100009
dc.subjectoxidative stressen
dc.subjectendoglinen
dc.subjectbasketballen
dc.subjectperiodisationen
dc.subjectexercise-induceden
dc.subjectinflammationen
dc.subjectTIME-MOTION ANALYSISen
dc.subjectECCENTRIC EXERCISEen
dc.subjectOXIDATIVE STRESSen
dc.subjectMUSCLEen
dc.subjectDAMAGEen
dc.subjectSKELETAL-MUSCLEen
dc.subjectPLYOMETRIC EXERCISEen
dc.subjectBLOOD METABOLITESen
dc.subjectALPHA-TOCOPHEROLen
dc.subjectELBOW FLEXORSen
dc.subjectIMMUNE-SYSTEMen
dc.subjectSport Sciencesen
dc.titleThe microcycle of inflammation and performance changes after a basketball matchen
dc.typejournalArticleen


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