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      Dihydrotestosterone is elevated following sprint exercise in healthy young men.

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          Abstract

          Dihydrotestosterone (DHT) exerts both functional and signaling effects extending beyond the effects of testosterone in rodent skeletal muscle. As a primer for investigating the role of DHT in human skeletal muscle function, this study aimed to determine whether circulating DHT is acutely elevated in men following a bout of repeat sprint exercise and to establish the importance of training status and sprint performance to this response. Fourteen healthy active young men (Vo2max 61.0 ± 8.1 ml·kg body mass(-1)·min(-1)) performed a bout of repeat sprint cycle exercise at a target workload based on an incremental work-rate maximum (10 × 30 s at 150% Wmax with 90-s recovery). Venous blood samples were collected preexercise and 5 and 60 min after exercise. Five minutes after exercise, there were significant elevations in total testosterone (TT; P < 0.001), free testosterone (FT; P < 0.001), and DHT (P = 0.004), which returned to baseline after 1 h. Changes in DHT with exercise (5 min postexercise - preexercise) correlated significantly with changes in TT (r = 0.870; P < 0.001) and FT (r = 0.914; P < 0.001). Sprinting cadence correlated with changes in FT (r = 0.697; P = 0.006), DHT (r = 0.625; P = 0.017), and TT (r = 0.603; P = 0.022), and habitual training volume correlated with the change in TT (r = 0.569, P = 0.034). In conclusion, our data demonstrate that DHT is acutely elevated following sprint cycle exercise and that this response is influenced by cycling cadence. The importance of DHT in the context of exercise training and sports performance remains to be determined.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          J. Appl. Physiol.
          Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)
          American Physiological Society
          1522-1601
          0161-7567
          May 15 2013
          : 114
          : 10
          Affiliations
          [1 ] Sport, Health and Exercise Science, Department for Health, University of Bath, UK. a.a.smith@bath.ac.uk
          Article
          japplphysiol.01419.2012
          10.1152/japplphysiol.01419.2012
          23471952
          1a328292-1874-4bba-96f4-7421027eb437
          History

          androgens,exercise training,sprint cycling,testosterone
          androgens, exercise training, sprint cycling, testosterone

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