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Journal of Nutrition Vol. 111 No. 9 September 1981, pp. 1593-1601
Copyright © 1981 by American Society for Nutrition
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Effects of Exercise on Iron and Copper Metabolism in Rats1,2,

Karen Sprehe Ruckman and Adria Rothman Sherman3

Department of Foods and Nutrition, University of Illinois, Urbana, IL 61801

We studied parameters of iron and copper status in male and female weanling rats that swan 11/2 hours per day, 5 days per week or were sedentary for 9 weeks. Final body weights of exercised males were lower (P < 0.005) than sedentary males, although food intakes were comparable. Blood hemoglobin concentrations and hematocrit levels were increased in the exercising males compared to the sedentary males (P < 0.025). Serum ceruloplasmin levels were significantly elevated in the exercised group. There was a trend toward decreased iron and increased copper in the spleens, livers and hearts of the exercised males. Total fecal iron was increased and, therefore, apparent iron absorption was decreased in the male exercise group as calculated from an iron and copper balance study conducted during week 8 of the exercise period. In female rats there were no effects of exercise in the parameters measured. Whether the different responses of males and females are due to sexual differences or a relative lack of exercise in the female rats which floated easily is not known. Elevated ceruloplasmin levels may be related to the stress of exercise. The results of this study indicate that exercise produces an alteration in iron and copper distribution and/or iron reutilization, absorption or excretion.


KEY WORDS: • iron • copper • exercise

1 Portions of this paper were presented at the Federation of Societies of Experimental Biology meeting in Atlanta, GA, 12–17 April 1981. Fed. Proc. 40(3):867, 1981.

2 Supported in part by funds from the University of Illinois Agricultural Experiment Station, Project #60-337.

3 To whom reprint requests should be sent.

Manuscript received 17 March 1981.





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