Sex differences in iron status during military training: a prospective cohort study of longitudinal changes and associations with endurance performance and musculoskeletal outcomes

BRITISH JOURNAL OF NUTRITION(2023)

引用 0|浏览12
暂无评分
摘要
This study investigated sex differences in Fe status, and associations between Fe status and endurance and musculoskeletal outcomes, in military training. In total, 2277 British Army trainees (581 women) participated. Fe markers and endurance performance (24 km run) were measured at the start (week 1) and end (week 13) of training. Whole-body areal body mineral density (aBMD) and markers of bone metabolism were measured at week 1. Injuries during training were recorded. Training decreased Hb in men and women (mean change (-01 (95 % CI -02, -00) and -07 (95 % CI -09, -06) g/dl, both P < 0001) but more so in women (P < 0001). Ferritin decreased in men and women (-27 (95 % CI -28, -23) and -5 (95 % CI -8, -1) mu g/l, both P <= 0001) but more so in men (P < 0001). Soluble transferrin receptor increased in men and women (29 (95 % CI 23, 36) and 38 (95 % CI 27, 49) nmol/l, both P < 0001), with no difference between sexes (P = 0872). Erythrocyte distribution width increased in men (03 (95 % CI 02, 04)%, P < 0001) but not in women (01 (95 % CI -01, 02)%, P = 0956). Mean corpuscular volume decreased in men (-15 (95 % CI -18, -11) fL, P < 0001) but not in women (04 (95 % CI -04, 13) fL, P = 0087). Lower ferritin was associated with slower 24 km run time (P = 0018), sustaining a lower limb overuse injury (P = 0048), lower aBMD (P = 0021) and higher beta C-telopeptide cross-links of type 1 collagen and procollagen type 1 N-terminal propeptide (both P < 0001) controlling for sex. Improving Fe stores before training may protect Hb in women and improve endurance and protect against injury.
更多
查看译文
关键词
iron status,endurance performance,military training,cohort study
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要