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The Pain & Therapy Bibliography, Record ID 5829 {show all records}

Ibuprofen use, endotoxemia, inflammation, and plasma cytokines during ultramarathon competition


added Jul 2, 10, updated Dec 19, 12
most detailed summaries by Paul Ingraham

summary

This experiment tested the effect of ibuprofen on hard-core marathoners. There were 29 ultra-marathoners on high doses of ibuprofen and 25 controls that completed the race without meds. There was no measurable difference in muscle damage or soreness between the two groups. Lead researcher David Niemen: “There is absolutely no reason for runners to be using ibuprofen.”

For some good mainstream journalism about this research see Convincing the Public to Accept New Medical Guidelines, by Christie Aschwanden. For a good plain language tour of the topic in a major medical journal, see Warden.

item type
article in a journal
authors
David C Nieman, Dru A Henson, Charles L Dumke, Kevin Oley, Steven R McAnulty, J Mark Davis, E Angela Murphy, Alan C Utter, Robert H Lind, Lisa S McAnulty, and Jason D Morrow
pubmed
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16554145
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journal
Brain Behav Immun
year
2006
month
Nov
volume
20
number
6
pages
578-84

abstract

The primary purpose of this study was to measure the influence of ibuprofen use during the 160-km Western States Endurance Run on endotoxemia, inflammation, and plasma cytokines. Subjects included 29 ultramarathoners who consumed 600 and 1200 mg ibuprofen the day before and on race day, respectively, and 25 controls that competed in the race but avoided ibuprofen and all other medications.

Blood and urine samples were collected the morning prior to and immediately following the race, and subjects recorded muscle soreness during the week following the race using a 10-point Likert scale (DOMS).

Race time (25.8+/-.6 and 25.6+/-.8 h, respectively) and ratings of perceived exertion (RPE, 6-20 scale) (14.6+/-.4 and 14.5+/-.2, respectively) did not differ significantly between ibuprofen users and nonusers. Ibuprofen use compared to nonuse was linked to a smaller increase in urine creatinine (P=.038), higher plasma levels of lipopolysaccharide (group effect, P=.042), and greater increases (pre-to-post race) in serum C-reactive protein and plasma cytokine levels for interleukin (IL)-6, IL-10, IL-8, IL-1 ra, granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, monocyte chemotactic protein 1, and macrophage inflammatory protein 1 beta, but not tumor necrosis factor alpha. Post-race DOMS and serum creatine kinase levels did not differ significantly between ibuprofen users and nonusers (20,621+/-3565 and 13,886+/-3068 microcal/L, respectively, P=.163).

In conclusion, ibuprofen use compared to nonuse by athletes competing in a 160-km race did not alter muscle damage or soreness, and was related to elevated indicators of endotoxemia and inflammation.

related content

These four articles on SaveYourself.ca cite this paper as a source:

  1. Save Yourself from IT Band Syndrome!
  2. Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness (DOMS)
  3. Repetitive Strain Injuries Tutorial
  4. The Three D’s of Quackery