The Relationship between Exercise and Salivary Oxidative Stress: A Systematic Review

Salivary content has been reported as a potential biomarker for oxidative stress assessments especially in context of exercise-induced oxidative stress. This systematic review following PRISMA guidelines aimed to evaluate the effects of physical exercise and changes promoted in oxidative stress iden...

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Published in:Antioxidants Vol. 11; no. 8; p. 1489
Main Authors: Alves, Raphael Charchar Campos, Ferreira, Railson Oliveira, Frazão, Deborah Ribeiro, de Souza Né, Yago Gecy, Mendes, Paulo Fernando Santos, Marañón-Vásquez, Guido, Royes, Luiz Fernando Freire, Fagundes, Nathalia Carolina Fernandes, Maia, Lucianne Cople, Lima, Rafael Rodrigues
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Basel MDPI AG 29-07-2022
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Summary:Salivary content has been reported as a potential biomarker for oxidative stress assessments especially in context of exercise-induced oxidative stress. This systematic review following PRISMA guidelines aimed to evaluate the effects of physical exercise and changes promoted in oxidative stress identified in saliva. Methods: Studies published up to May 2022 were searched in online databases (PubMed, Scopus, Web of Science, The Cochrane Library, LILACS, OpenGrey, and Google Scholar). Risk of bias evaluation were performed using the Quality Assessment Tool for Before-After (Pre-Post) Studies with No Control Group. Results: A total of 473 references were identified and 22 considered eligible. In this case 14 studies reported increase of antioxidant parameters in saliva while eight studies demonstrated increased lipid peroxidation after exercise. Regarding nitrite levels, two studies showed higher levels after exercise. The quality of evidence was very low due to high heterogeneity, inconsistency and indirectness among studies according Grading of Recommendations, Assessment, Development and Evaluation analysis. Conclusion: Increase of oxidative stress and antioxidant activity in saliva appears to be present after exercise, especially at moderate intensity. However, the wide variety of methods leads to divergent data. For precision in salivary assessments, new research with larger sample sizes and better participant matching are recommended.
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These authors contributed equally to this work.
ISSN:2076-3921
2076-3921
DOI:10.3390/antiox11081489