Could pre-infection exercise training improve the efficacy of specific antiparasitic chemotherapy for Chagas disease?
Elda Gonçalves SantosReggiani Vilela GonçalvesThaiany G Souza-SilvaIzabel R S C MaldonadoEliziária C SantosAndré TalvaniAntônio J NataliRômulo Dias NovaesPublished in: Parasitology (2019)
Considering a potential exercise-drug interaction, we investigated whether exercise training could improve the efficacy of specific antiparasitic chemotherapy in a rodent model of Chagas disease. Wistar rats were randomized into five groups: sedentary and uninfected (CT); sedentary and infected (SI); sedentary, infected and treated (SIT); trained and infected (TI); trained, infected and treated (TIT). After 9-weeks running training, the animals were infected with T. cruzi and followed up for 4 weeks, receiving 100 mg kg-1 day-1 benznidazole. No evidence of myocarditis was observed in CT animals. TI animals exhibited reduced parasitemia, myocarditis, and reactive tissue damage compared to SI animals, in addition to increased IFN-γ, IL-4, IL-10, heart non-protein antioxidant (NPA) levels and glutathione-s transferase activity (P < 0.05). The CT, SIT and TIT groups presented similar reductions in parasitemia, cytokines (IFN-γ, TNF-α, IL-4, IL-10, IL-17 and MCP-1), inflammatory infiltrate, oxidative heart damage and antioxidant enzymes activity compared to SI and TI animals, as well as reduced heart microstructural remodeling (P < 0.05). By modulating heart inflammation and redox metabolism, exercise training exerts a protective effect against T. cruzi infection in rats. However, the antiparasitic and cardioprotective effects of benznidazole chemotherapy are more pronounced, determining similar endpoints in sedentary and trained T. cruzi-infected rats.
Keyphrases
- placebo controlled
- physical activity
- oxidative stress
- phase ii
- heart failure
- computed tomography
- resistance training
- skeletal muscle
- contrast enhanced
- image quality
- locally advanced
- dual energy
- high intensity
- atrial fibrillation
- rheumatoid arthritis
- immune response
- dendritic cells
- magnetic resonance imaging
- squamous cell carcinoma
- hiv infected
- signaling pathway
- positron emission tomography
- anti inflammatory
- single molecule
- white matter
- climate change
- adverse drug
- binding protein
- pet ct