The 13-fold reduction in CD8+ T cells from maximal exertion to 4 hours after in the healthy controls is particularly remarkable, compared to no significant change in CD8+T cells in the women with ME/CFS.
I've briefly tried looking to see if such a decrease following exercise is normal, but I haven't been able to find another example.
I haven't read any of these yet, but so far I found the following refs, mostly from the last 3 years, plus a few potentially related. Feel free to peel this off to a separate thread if there's interest.
- The growing field of immunometabolism and exercise: Key findings in the last 5 years (2022, Journal of Cellular Physiology)
- Characterization of transitional memory CD4+ and CD8+ T-cell mobilization during and after an acute bout of exercise (2023, Frontiers in Sports and Active Living)
- Mastering an exhausting marathon: how CD8+ T cells fine-tune metabolic fitness (2022, Immunology and Cell Biology)
- Acute exercise impacts AhR and PD-1 levels of CD8+ T-cells—Exploratory results from a randomized cross-over trial comparing endurance versus resistance exercise (2020, European Journal of Applied Physiology)
- Acute aerobic exercise in humans increases cytokine expression in CD27− but not CD27+ CD8+ T-cells (2012, Brain, Behavior, and Immunity)
Also —
- Exercise mobilizes diverse antigen specific T-cells and elevates neutralizing antibodies in humans with natural immunity to SARS CoV-2 (2023, Brain, Behavior, & Immunity - Health)
- Impact of acute exercise on peripheral blood mononuclear cells nutrient sensing and mitochondrial oxidative capacity in healthy young adults (2021, Physiological Reports)
- Mitochondrial Mass of Naïve T Cells Is Associated with Aerobic Fitness and Energy Expenditure of Active and Inactive Adults (2022, Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise)
- Influence of Exercise on Exhausted and Senescent T Cells: A Systematic Review (2021, Frontiers in Physiology)
- Exercise Attenuates M1 Macrophages and CD8+ T Cells in the Adipose Tissue of Obese Mice (2013, Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise)