Int J Sports Med 1983; 04(1): 14-20
DOI: 10.1055/s-2008-1026010
© Georg Thieme Verlag Stuttgart · New York

Aspects of Hormonal Regulation of Lipolysis During Exercise: Effects of Chronic β-Receptor Blockade*

I.-W. Franz1 , F. W. Lohmann2 , G. Koch3 , H.-J. Quabbe4
  • 1Departments of Sports Medicine and Cardiology, Free University of Berlin
  • 2Department of Medicine, Neukölln Hospital, Berlin
  • 3Department of Physiology, Free Universität of Berlin
  • 4Department of Medicine, Klinikum Steglitz, Free Universität of Berlin
* This study was supported in part by grants from the Bundesinstitut für Sportwissenschaft.
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Publication History

Publication Date:
14 March 2008 (online)

Abstract

Exercise-induced lipolysis and hormones possibly involved in the regulation of lipid metabolism in association with exercise (plasma catecholamines, ACTH, HGH, TSH, insulin) were studied in 11 WHO stage 1 to 2 hypertensive men (mean age 37 yearsl during a 30-min steady-state submaximal (65% of V̇O2 max) and near-maximal exercise seated on a bicycle ergometer. To assess the contribution of the sympathetic system to the regulation of lipolysis and to define the type of (β-receptors mediating the catecholamine effects on lipolysis, all patients were again studied under identical conditions after a 4-week treatment with the (β-1- β-2-receptor antagonist pindolol (15 mg daily) and with the (β-1-receptor blocker acebutolol (500 mg daily). Eight patients were even restudied after a 16-month treatment with acebutolol.

Plasma glycerol levels increased progressively (P < 0.001) during exercise reflecting increased exercise-induced lipolysis. The concomitant significant rise of noradrenalin, adrenaline, ACTH, and HGH and the parallel fall in plasma insulin suggest that all these hormones are involved in the adjustment of exercise-induced lipolysis. However, the impaired cate-cholamine-induced lipolysis under (β-receptor blockade was not accompanied by significant compensatory increases of ACTH, HGH, or TSH or a fall in insulin during exercise. Both (β-receptor antagonists resulted in a similar 27% inhibition of lipolysis confirming that the catecholamine-induced increase of lipolysis is mainly mediated via (β-1-adrenoceptors.

After 16 months of treatment with acebutolol, the degree of inhibition of the exercise-induced lipolysis was unchanged. However, FFA were significantly reduced (28%, P < 0.05) and HGH significantly (100%, P < 0.05) increased.

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