Abstract
This study measured the influence of the flavonoid quercetin on immune changes and incidence rates of upper respiratory tract infections in ultramarathoners competing in the 160-km Western States Endurance Run. Sixty-three runners were randomized to quercetin and placebo groups, and under double-blinded methods ingested 1000 mg/day quercetin for 3 wks before, during, and 2 wks after the race. Thirty-nine of the 63 subjects (n = 18 for quercetin, n = 21 for placebo) finished the race and provided blood and saliva samples the morning before the race and 15-30min postrace. Upper respiratory tract infections were assessed during the week before and the 2-wk period after the race using an illness symptom checklist. Race times did not differ significantly between quercetin and placebo groups. Significant pre- to postrace decreases were measured for natural killer cells (43%), granulocyte respiratory burst activity (55%), and salivary IgA output (48%), and increases for neutrophil (288%) and monocyte (211 %) cell counts, with no significant group differences. Postrace illness rates did not differ between groups. In conclusion, quercetin supplementation for 3 wks before and 2 wks after the Western States Endurance Run had no effect on illness rates, perturbations in leukocyte subset counts, or decreases in granulocyte respiratory burst activity and salivary IgA.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 856-863 |
Number of pages | 8 |
Journal | International Journal of Sports Medicine |
Volume | 29 |
Issue number | 10 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Oct 2008 |
Keywords
- Antibodies
- Exercise
- IgA
- Infections
- Natural killer cells
- Respiratory burst