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Hepatitis B found in wrestlers' sweat.


Some Olympic-level wrestlers See
  • list of amateur wrestlers
  • list of professional wrestlers
  • list of independent circuit, non-affiliated or retired professional wrestlers
and
 have traces of the hepatitis B Hepatitis B Definition

Hepatitis B is a potentially serious form of liver inflammation due to infection by the hepatitis B virus (HBV). It occurs in both rapidly developing (acute) and long-lasting (chronic) forms, and is one of the most common chronic
 virus in their blood and sweat and they may risk spreading it to their teammates and opponents, a study suggests.

Researchers in Turkey obtained blood and perspiration perspiration: see sweat.
perspiration

Fluid given off by the skin as vapour by simple evaporation or as sweat actively secreted from sweat glands to evaporate and cool the body.
 from 70 male wrestlers competing in a Turkish National Championship. Nine had small but detectable amounts of hepatitis B virus in their blood, eight had it in their sweat, and one man had it in both. None of the wrestlers had hepatitis symptoms such as liver problems, says study coauthor Selda Bereket-Yucel, an exercise physiologist at Celal Bayar University in Manisa.

The study, described in an upcoming British Journal of Sports Medicine sports medicine, branch of medicine concerned with physical fitness and with the treatment and prevention of injuries and other disorders related to sports. Knee, leg, back, and shoulder injuries; stiffness and pain in joints; tendinitis; "tennis elbow"; and , didn't establish how the wrestlers acquired the virus or whether it had spread among them, she says. But 26 of the 70 men reported having had bleeding wounds or other open skin injuries during training or competition.

The extreme stress placed on athletes in training might contribute to infection. "It is well established that prolonged pro·long  
tr.v. pro·longed, pro·long·ing, pro·longs
1. To lengthen in duration; protract.

2. To lengthen in extent.
 exercise may induce a temporary immune suppression," Bereket-Yucel says.

Uninfected wrestlers in the group have since been vaccinated against hepatitis B, and the others are being monitored, she says.

Not all sports organizations require hepatitis B testing or vaccination vaccination, means of producing immunity against pathogens, such as viruses and bacteria, by the introduction of live, killed, or altered antigens that stimulate the body to produce antibodies against more dangerous forms. . If these preliminary results push such groups to recommend testing, Bereket-Yucel says, "that would be a beginning."--N.S.
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Title Annotation:BIOMEDICINE
Publication:Science News
Date:Mar 24, 2007
Words:221
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