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      Efectos de la suplementación con vitamina E en la reducción del dolor muscular de inicio retardado. Una revisión narrativa Translated title: Effects of Vitamin E Supplementation in Reducing Delayed Onset Muscle Pain. A Narrative Review

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          Abstract

          Resumen Antecedentes: actualmente existe un creciente interés en investigar métodos que logren disminuir el dolor muscular de inicio retardado. Se ha postulado que antioxidantes como las vitaminas C y E pueden atenuarlo. Objetivo: evaluar la efectividad de vitamina E en la atenuación del dolor muscular de inicio retardado. Materiales y métodos: se realizó una búsqueda bibliográfica en las bases de datos Medline, Registro Central Cochrane, Scopus, SportDiscus y SciELO, utilizando los términos: “vitamin e supplementation”, “muscle damage” y “delayed onset muscle soreness”. Resultados: se revisaron estudios en diversos grupos poblacionales, con diferentes métodos de evaluación y diversas dosis de vitamina E. Los resultados obtenidos fueron controversiales, en algunos casos se demostró un efecto atenuante del dolor muscular de inicio retardado y en otros casos no. Conclusiones: la vitamina E produce una disminución del estrés oxidativo y estabilización el sarcolema; no obstante, faltan pruebas concluyentes para afirmar que la vitamina E tenga el efecto de generar mejoras en los biomarcadores asociados al dolor muscular de inicio retardado.

          Translated abstract

          Abstract Background: Currently, there is a growing interest in investigating methods that reduce delayed onset muscle pain. It has been postulated that antioxidants such as vitamin C and E can attenuate it. Objective: To evaluate the effectiveness of vitamin E in mitigating delayed onset muscle pain. Materials and Methods: A bibliographic search was carried out in the following databases: Medline, Registry Central Cochrane, Scopus, SportDiscus and SciELO, using the terms: “vitamin e supplementation”, “muscle damage” and “delayed onset muscle soreness”. Results: Studies in diverse population groups were reviewed, with various evaluation methods and differing doses of vitamin E. The results were very controversial, in some cases a delayed onset pain effect was demonstrated and in other cases not. Conclusion: Vitamin E produces a decrease in oxidative stress and stabilization of sarcolemma, however, conclusive evidence is lacking to state that vitamin E will have the effect of generating improvements in biomarkers associated with delayed onset muscle pain.

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          Oxidative stress: a concept in redox biology and medicine

          Introduction The concept of oxidative stress has been introduced for research in redox biology and medicine in 1985, now 30 years ago, in an introductory chapter 1 in a book entitled ‘Oxidative Stress’ [2]. A concurrent comprehensive review entitled ‘Biochemistry of Oxidative Stress’ [3] presented the knowledge on pro-oxidants and antioxidants and their endogenous and exogenous sources and metabolic sinks. Since then, Redox Biology as a research area has found fulminant development in a wide range of disciplines, starting from chemistry and radiation biology through biochemistry and cell physiology all the way into general biology and medicine. A noteworthy insight, early on, was the perception that oxidation-reduction (redox) reactions in living cells are utilized in fundamental processes of redox regulation, collectively termed ‘redox signaling’ and ‘redox control’. A book ‘Antioxidant and Redox Regulation of Genes’ highlighted that development at an early stage [4]. Since then, an overwhelming and fascinating area of research has flourished, under the name of Redox Biology [5,6]. The concept of oxidative stress was updated to include the role of redox signaling [7], and there were efforts of redefining oxidative stress [8,9]. These developments were mirrored by the appearance of monographs, book series and the establishment of new research journals. Many volumes were published in Methods in Enzymology. An impressive number of new journals sprang up, Free Radical Research (initially Free Radical Research Communications), Free Radicals in Biology and Medicine, Redox Reports, Antioxidant Redox Signaling, and most recently Redox Biology. Useful as the term ‘oxidative stress’ may be in research, there has been an inflationary development in research circles and more so in the medical field and, even more than that, in public usage outside scientific endeavors (I would call it ‘over-stressing’ the term). This led to a dilution of the meaning, to overuse and even misuse. Cautionary words were published [10] and even explicit criticism was voiced [11,12]. “Over time, the mechanistic basis of the concept was largely forgotten and instead of the oxidative stress hypothesis becoming more precise in terms of molecular targets and mechanism, it became diffuse and nonspecific” [12]. In fact, an ‘oxidative stress hypothesis’ has not been formulated up to now. If anything, there were implicit deductions: for example, that because of the redox balance concept any single compound, e.g. a small-molecule redox-active vitamin, could alter the totality of the system. Such a view overlooks counterregulation and redundancies in the redox network. There is specificity inherent in the strategies of antioxidant defense [13]. Obviously, a general term describing a global condition cannot be meant to depict specific spatiotemporal chemical relationships in detail and in specific cells or organ conditions. Rather, it entails these, and directed effort is warranted to unravel the exact chemical and physical conditions and their significance in each case. Given the enormous variety and range of pro-oxidant and antioxidant enzymes and compounds, attempts were made to classify subforms of oxidative stress [7] and to conceptually introduce intensity scales ranging from physiological oxidative stress to excessive and toxic oxidative burden [14], as indicated in Table 1. There is ample evidence for the role of oxidation products of DNA, RNA, carbohydrates, proteins and lipids. What are the merits and pitfalls of ‘oxidative stress’ today? A comprehensive treatment of this question is to be deferred to an in-depth treatment (in preparation). However, for the purpose of the present Commentary it may suffice to collect a few thoughts: from its very nature, it is a challenge to combine the basic chemical notion of oxidation-reduction, including electron transfer, free radicals, oxygen metabolites (such as the superoxide anion radical, hydrogen peroxide, hydroxyl radical, electronically excited states such as singlet molecular oxygen, as well as the nitric oxide radical and peroxynitrite) with a biological concept, that of stress, first introduced by Selye in his research of adaptive responses [15,16]. The two words ‘oxidative’ and ‘stress’ elicit a notion which, in a nutshell, focuses on an important sector of fundamental processes in biology. This is a merit. Pitfalls are close-by: in research, simply to talk of ‘exposing cells or organisms to oxidative stress’ should clearly be discouraged. Instead, the exact molecular condition employed to change the redox balance of a given system is what is important; for example, in an experimental study cells were exposed to hydrogen peroxide, not to oxidative stress. Such considerations are even more appropriate in applications in the medical world. Quite often, redox components which are thought to be centrally important in disease processes are flatly denoted as oxidative stress; this can still be found in numerous schemes in the current biomedical literature. The underlying biochemically rigorous foundation may often be missing. Constructive criticism in this sense has been voiced repeatedly [11,12,17]. A related pitfall in this sense is the use of the term ROS, which stands for reactive oxygen species (the individual chemical reactants which were named in the preceding paragraph); whenever the specific chemical entity of the oxidant is known, that oxidant should be mentioned and discussed, not the generic ‘ROS’. This ‘one-size-fits-all’ mentality pervades also into the analytics: measuring so-called ‘total antioxidant capacity (TAC)’ in a blood plasma sample will not give useful information on the state of the organism, and should be discouraged [18]. Rather, individual antioxidant enzyme activities and patterns of antioxidant molecules need to be assessed. In view of the knowledge that the major burden of antioxidant defense is shouldered by antioxidant enzymes [13], it seems puzzling—in hindsight—that large human clinical studies based on one or two low-molecular-weight antioxidant compounds were undertaken. 3 What is attractive about ‘oxidative stress’? 3.1 Molecular redox switches What seems to be attractive about the term is the implicit notion of adaptation, coming from the general association of stress with stress response. This goes back to Selye's concept of stress as the ‘general adaptation syndrome’ [19]. The enormously productive field of molecular switches was opened by the discovery of phosphorylation/dephosphorylation, serving a mechanism in molecular signaling [20]. The role of redox switches came into focus more recently, foremost the dynamic role of cysteines in proteins, opening the field of the redox proteome, currently flourishing because of advances in mass spectrometric and imaging methodology [21–24]. A bridge between phosphorylation/dephosphorylation and protein cysteine reduction/oxidation is given by the redox sensitivity of critical cysteinyl residues in protein phosphatases, opening the molecular pathway for signaling cascades as fundamental processes throughout biology. What was particularly exciting to many researchers was the discovery of master switch systems [25], prominent examples being OxyR in bacteria [26] and NFkB [27] and Nrf2/Keap1 [28] in higher organisms. That batteries of enzyme activities are mustered by activation of gene transcription through a ‘simple’ redox signal is still an exciting strategy. Much of current effort in redox biology is addressed towards these response systems. Obviously, medical and pharmacological intervention attempts are a consequence. Outlook Current interest into the linkage of oxidative stress to inflammation and inflammatory responses is adding a new perspective. For example, inflammatory macrophages release glutathionylated peroxiredoxin-2, which then acts as a ‘danger signal’ to trigger the production of tumor necrosis factor-alpha [29]. The orchestrated responses to danger signals related to damage-associated molecular patterns (DAMPs) include relations to oxidative stress [30]. Under oxidative stress conditions, a protein targeting factor, Get3 in yeast (mammalian TRC40) functions as an ATP-independent chaperone [31]. More detailed molecular understanding will also deepen the translational impact into biology and medicine; as mentioned above, these aspects are beyond this Commentary and will be treated elsewhere. However, it might be mentioned, for example, that viral and bacterial infections are often associated with deficiencies in micronutrients, including the essential trace element, selenium, the redox-active moiety in selenoproteins. Selenium status may affect the function of cells in both adaptive and innate immunity [32]. Major diseases, now even diabetes Type 2, are being considered as ‘redox disease’ [33]. Molecular insight will enhance the thrust of the concept of oxidative stress, which is intimately linked to cellular energy balance. Thus, the subcellular compartmentation of redox processes and redox components is being studied at a new level, in mammalian cells [34] as well as in phototrophic organisms [35]. New insight from spatiotemporal organization of hydrogen peroxide metabolism [36] complements the longstanding interest in hydroperoxide metabolism in mammalian organs and its relationship to bioenergetics [37]. The following quote attributed to Hans Selye [38] might well apply to the concept of oxidative stress: “If only stress could be seen, isolated and measured, I am sure we could enormously lengthen the average human life span”.
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            Exercise-induced oxidative stress: cellular mechanisms and impact on muscle force production.

            The first suggestion that physical exercise results in free radical-mediated damage to tissues appeared in 1978, and the past three decades have resulted in a large growth of knowledge regarding exercise and oxidative stress. Although the sources of oxidant production during exercise continue to be debated, it is now well established that both resting and contracting skeletal muscles produce reactive oxygen species and reactive nitrogen species. Importantly, intense and prolonged exercise can result in oxidative damage to both proteins and lipids in the contracting myocytes. Furthermore, oxidants can modulate a number of cell signaling pathways and regulate the expression of multiple genes in eukaryotic cells. This oxidant-mediated change in gene expression involves changes at transcriptional, mRNA stability, and signal transduction levels. Furthermore, numerous products associated with oxidant-modulated genes have been identified and include antioxidant enzymes, stress proteins, DNA repair proteins, and mitochondrial electron transport proteins. Interestingly, low and physiological levels of reactive oxygen species are required for normal force production in skeletal muscle, but high levels of reactive oxygen species promote contractile dysfunction resulting in muscle weakness and fatigue. Ongoing research continues to probe the mechanisms by which oxidants influence skeletal muscle contractile properties and to explore interventions capable of protecting muscle from oxidant-mediated dysfunction.
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              Dietary Reference Intakes for Vitamin C, Vitamin E, Selenium, and Carotenoids

              (2000)
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                penh
                Perspectivas en Nutrición Humana
                Perspect Nut Hum
                Universidad de Antioquia (Medellín, Antioquia, Colombia )
                0124-4108
                December 2019
                : 21
                : 2
                : 219-227
                Affiliations
                [2] Concepción Bío-Bío orgnameUniversidad Católica de la Santísima Concepción orgdiv1Facultad de Medicina orgdiv2Departamento de Salud Pública Chile
                [3] Santiago de Chile orgnameUniversidad del Desarrollo orgdiv1Facultad de Salud Chile
                [1] Santiago de Chile orgnameUniversidad Santo Tomás orgdiv1Facultad de Salud Chile h3ct0r.fuentes.b@ 123456gmail.com
                [5] Araucanía orgnameUniversidad Autónoma de Chile orgdiv1Facultad de Ciencias de la Salud Chile
                [4] Santiago de Chile orgnameUniversidad Finis Terrae orgdiv1Facultad de Medicina Chile
                Article
                S0124-41082019000200219 S0124-4108(19)02100200219
                10.17533/udea.penh.v21n2a07
                417f9039-93a3-4674-97c9-419629b815b1

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 31 December 2018
                : 04 December 2019
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 50, Pages: 9
                Product

                SciELO Colombia

                Categories
                Artículo de revisión

                antioxidants,vitamin E,suplementos dietéticos,tocoferoles,vitamina E,antioxidantes,dolor muscular,muscle soreness,Dietary supplements,tocopherols

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