Exercising in a hot environment with muscle damage: effects on acute kidney injury biomarkers and kidney function

Author:

Junglee Naushad A.12,Di Felice Umberto13,Dolci Alberto1,Fortes Matthew B.1,Jibani Mahdi M.2,Lemmey Andrew B.1,Walsh Neil P.1,Macdonald Jamie H.1

Affiliation:

1. Extremes Research Group, College of Health and Behavioural Sciences, Bangor University, Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom;

2. Department of Nephrology, Gwynedd Hospital, Betsi Cadwaladr University Health Board, Bangor, Wales, United Kingdom; and

3. Department of Biomedical Sciences and Technologies, University of L'Aquila, Coppito, Italy

Abstract

Unaccustomed strenuous physical exertion in hot environments can result in heat stroke and acute kidney injury (AKI). Both exercise-induced muscle damage and AKI are associated with the release of interleukin-6, but whether muscle damage causes AKI in the heat is unknown. We hypothesized that muscle-damaging exercise, before exercise in the heat, would increase kidney stress. Ten healthy euhydrated men underwent a randomized, crossover trial involving both a 60-min downhill muscle-damaging run (exercise-induced muscle damage; EIMD), and an exercise intensity-matched non-muscle-damaging flat run (CON), in random order separated by 2 wk. Both treatments were followed by heat stress elicited by a 40-min run at 33°C. Urine and blood were sampled at baseline, after treatment, and after subjects ran in the heat. By design, EIMD induced higher plasma creatine kinase and interleukin-6 than CON. EIMD elevated kidney injury biomarkers (e.g., urinary neutrophil gelatinase-associated lipocalin (NGAL) after a run in the heat: EIMD-CON, mean difference [95% CI]: 12 [5, 19] ng/ml) and reduced kidney function (e.g., plasma creatinine after a run in the heat: EIMD-CON, mean difference [95% CI]: 0.2 [0.1, 0.3] mg/dl), where CI is the confidence interval. Plasma interleukin-6 was positively correlated with plasma NGAL ( r = 0.9, P = 0.001). Moreover, following EIMD, 5 of 10 participants met AKIN criteria for AKI. Thus for the first time we demonstrate that muscle-damaging exercise before running in the heat results in a greater inflammatory state and kidney stress compared with non-muscle-damaging exercise. Muscle damage should therefore be considered a risk factor for AKI when performing exercise in hot environments.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology

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