Artigo Revisado por pares

Regulation of exercise carbohydrate metabolism by estrogen and progesterone in women

2002; American Physiological Society; Volume: 283; Issue: 5 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1152/ajpendo.00271.2002

ISSN

1522-1555

Autores

Tara M. D'Eon, Carrie G. Sharoff, Stuart R. Chipkin, Dan Grow, Brent C. Ruby, Barry Braun,

Tópico(s)

Pharmacological Effects and Assays

Resumo

To assess the roles of endogenous estrogen (E 2 ) and progesterone (P 4 ) in regulating exercise carbohydrate use, we used pharmacological suppression and replacement to create three distinct hormonal environments: baseline (B), with E 2 and P 4 low; estrogen only (E), with E 2 high and P 4 low; and estrogen/progesterone (E + P), with E 2 and P 4 high. Blood glucose uptake (R d ), total carbohydrate oxidation (CHO ox ), and estimated muscle glycogen utilization (EMGU) were assessed during 60 min of submaximal exercise by use of stable isotope dilution and indirect calorimetry in eight eumenorrheic women. Compared with B (1.26 ± 0.04 g/min) and E + P (1.27 ± 0.04 g/min), CHO ox was lower with E (1.05 ± 0.02 g/min). Glucose R d tended to be lower with E and E + P relative to B. EMGU was 25% lower with E than with B or E + P. Plasma free fatty acids (FFA) were inversely related to EMGU ( r 2 = 0.49). The data suggest that estrogen lowers CHO ox by reducing EMGU and glucose R d . Progesterone increases EMGU but not glucose R d . The opposing actions of E 2 and P 4 on EMGU may be mediated by their impact on FFA availability or vice versa.

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