Published 2022
| Version v1
Publication
Swimming and the human microbiome at the intersection of sports, clinical, and environmental sciences: A scoping review of the literature
Description
The human microbiota is comprised of more than 10–100 trillion microbial
taxa and symbiotic cells. Two major human sites that are host to microbial
communities are the gut and the skin. Physical exercise has favorable effects
on the structure of human microbiota and metabolite production in sedentary
subjects. Recently, the concept of "athletic microbiome" has been introduced.
To the best of our knowledge, there exists no review specifically addressing
the potential role of microbiomics for swimmers, since each sports discipline
requires a specific set of techniques, training protocols, and interactions
with the athletic infrastructure/facility. Therefore, to fill in this gap, the
present scoping review was undertaken. Four studies were included, three
focusing on the gut microbiome, and one addressing the skin microbiome.
It was found that several exercise-related variables, such as training
volume/intensity, impact the athlete's microbiome, and specifically the
non-core/peripheral microbiome, in terms of its architecture/composition,
richness, and diversity. Swimming-related power-/sprint- and endurance-
oriented activities, acute bouts and chronic exercise, anaerobic/aerobic
energy systems have a differential impact on the athlete's microbiome.
Therefore, their microbiome can be utilized for different purposes, including
talent identification, monitoring the effects of training methodologies, and
devising ad hoc conditioning protocols, including dietary supplementation.
Microbiomics can be exploited also for clinical purposes, assessing the effects
of exposure to swimming pools and developing potential pharmacological
strategies to counteract the insurgence of skin infections/inflammation,
including acne. In conclusion, microbiomics appears to be a promising
tool, even though current research is still limited, warranting, as such,
further studies.
Additional details
Identifiers
- URL
- https://hdl.handle.net/11567/1093497
- URN
- urn:oai:iris.unige.it:11567/1093497
Origin repository
- Origin repository
- UNIGE