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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (fatigue)
51,768 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Neurological symptoms including lethargy, obtundation, and confusion are early and common findings in patients with sepsis. The etiology of the mental status changes that occur during severe infection is not known. We investigated the effects of sepsis on the levels of high-energy phosphates to determine whether decreased energy metabolism was a factor in the depressed neurological state. The time course of changes in brain pH and brain high-energy phosphate metabolites during an Escherichia coli infusion was determined from sequential phosphorus-31 nuclear magnetic resonance (31P-NMR) spectra of ketamine-xylazine-anesthetized rats. A second group of rats received 0.9% saline infusion and served as a control group. Despite severe obtundation and near loss of righting reflex, the rats in the septic group had no significant differences in the brain pH, the ratio of phosphocreatine (PCr) to beta-adenosine 5'-triphosphate (beta-ATP), or in the ratio of PCr to Pi. The only significant decrease in brain high-energy phosphates or pH occurred terminally in the septic rat group and corresponded with a rapidly falling arterial blood pressure. We conclude that the severe neurological depression that is characteristic of sepsis is not due to decreased levels of brain high-energy phosphates or brain acidosis.
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PMID:An in vivo examination of rat brain during sepsis with 31P-NMR spectroscopy. 261 Feb 45

Phosphorus nuclear magnetic resonance (31P NMR) spectroscopy is a non-destructive analytical laboratory technique that, due to recent technical advances, has become applicable to the study of high-energy phosphate metabolism in both animal and human extremity muscles (in vivo). 31P NMR can assay cellular phosphocreatine, ATP, inorganic phosphate, the phosphorylated glycolytic intermediates, and intra-cellular pH in either resting or exercising muscle, in a non-invasive manner. NMR uses non-perturbing levels of radio-frequency energy as its biophysical probe and can therefore safely study intact muscle in a repeated fashion while exerting no artifactual influence on ongoing metabolic processes. Compared with standard tissue biopsy and biochemical assay techniques, NMR possesses the advantages of being non-invasive, allowing serial in situ studies of the same tissue sample, and providing measurements of only active (unbound) metabolites. NMR studies of exercising muscle have yielded information regarding fatigue mechanisms at the cellular level and are helping resolve long-standing questions regarding the metabolic control of glycolysis, oxidative phosphorylation, and post-exercise phosphocreatine re-synthesis. NMR is also being utilized to measure enzymatic reaction rates in vivo. In the near future, other forms of NMR spectroscopy may also permit the non-invasive measurement of tissue glycogen and lactate content.
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PMID:Phosphorus nuclear magnetic resonance: a non-invasive technique for the study of muscle bioenergetics during exercise. 330 42

Chronic stimulation converts skeletal muscle of mixed fiber type to a uniform muscle made up of type I, fatigue-resistant fibers. Here, the bioenergetic correlates of fatigue resistance in conditioned canine latissimus dorsi are assessed with in vivo phosphorus-31 nuclear magnetic resonance (31P-NMR) spectroscopy. After chronic electrical stimulation, five dogs underwent 31P-NMR spectroscopic and isometric tension measurements on conditioned and contralateral control muscle during stimulation for 200, 300, 500, and 800 ms of an 1,100-ms duty cycle. With stimulation, phosphocreatine (PCr) fell proportional to the degree of stimulation in both conditioned and control muscle but fell significantly less in conditioned muscle at all but the least intense stimulation period (200 ms). Isometric tension, expressed as a tension time index per gram muscle, was significantly greater in the conditioned muscle at the two longest stimulation periods. The overall small change in PCr and the lack of a plateau in tension observed in the conditioned muscle are similar to that seen in cardiac muscle during increased energy demand. This study indicates that the conditioned muscle's markedly enhanced resistance to fatigue is in part the result of its increased capacity for oxidative phosphorylation.
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PMID:In vivo 31P-NMR spectroscopy of chronically stimulated canine skeletal muscle. 334 65

The pathophysiology of the myopathy in dysthyroid states is poorly understood. We therefore tested the effects of thyroid hormones on muscle bioenergetics in humans and rats, using in vivo 31P NMR. Two hypothyroid patients had: low phosphocreatine to inorganic phosphate ratio (PCr/Pi) at rest, increased PCr depletion during exercise and delayed postexercise recovery of PCr/Pi. Eight thyroidectomized rats did not show abnormalities at rest, but muscle work induced by nerve stimulation resulted in a significantly (P less than 0.0001) lower PCr/Pi (35-45% of control) at each of the three stimulation frequencies tested (0.25, 0.5, and 1.0 Hz). Recovery rate was markedly slowed to one-third of normal values. Thyroxine therapy reversed these abnormalities in both human and rat muscle. Five patients and six rats with hyperthyroidism did not differ from normal controls during rest and exercise but had an unusually rapid recovery after exercise. The bioenergetic abnormalities in hypothyroid muscle suggest the existence of a hormone-dependent, reversible mitochondrial impairment in this disorder. The exercise intolerance and fatigue experienced in hypothyroid muscle may be due to such a bioenergetic impairment. The changes in energy metabolism in hyperthyroid muscle probably do not cause the muscular disease in this disorder.
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PMID:Effects of thyroid hormones on skeletal muscle bioenergetics. In vivo phosphorus-31 magnetic resonance spectroscopy study of humans and rats. 338 46

During muscular fatigue two metabolites, hydrogen ions (H+) and inorganic phosphate (Pi), increase in concentration. The effect of increase in [H+] has been modeled mathematically for a system containing creatine kinase (EC 2.7.3.2), adenylate kinase (EC 2.7.4.3), and the appropriate concentrations of their substrates. Assuming that no other equilibrium reactions are involved, the result of acidification should be a useful increase in the ratio [ATP]/[ADP]. It is also shown by a reanalysis of earlier 31P NMR studies that the observed combination of increased [H+] and increased [Pi] leads to an increase in the monobasic phosphate concentration [Pi-] that is inversely proportional to the force of contraction. This suggests that Pi- may be a direct inhibitor of the actomyosin ATPase system.
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PMID:Muscular fatigue: effects of hydrogen ions and inorganic phosphate. 353 90

31P NMR has been used to observe the in vivo phosphometabolite concentrations in the tail musculature from the prawn Palaemon elegans, at rest and after escape swimming and subsequent recovery. Muscular fatigue corresponds to a 60% breakdown of phosphoarginine, and a 45% increase of sugar phosphates. The pHi fell from 7.10 to 6.86. During recovery, the sugar phosphates and arginine phosphate are replenished after 20 minutes. The ATP concentration did not change throughout the experiment. The pHi was restored within 20 minutes.
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PMID:In vivo 31P NMR in crustacean muscles: fatigue and recovery in the tail musculature from the prawn Palaemon elegans. 359 47

The regulation of the energy metabolism in contracting skeletal muscle is under close control, and several regulating factors have been reported. The aim of this study was to investigate the importance of the oxygen supply as a limiting factor for muscle performance during contractions and recovery from contractions. To perform well-controlled standardized experiments on contracting skeletal muscle, the perfused rat hind limb model was developed. The 31P NMR technique was adapted to the rat hind limb model. This enabled continuous nondestructive monitoring of the energy state at various levels of muscular activity. Significant correlations were found between oxygen delivery and oxygen consumption, lactate release, and glucose uptake, respectively. An increased degree of fatigue was observed at lower oxygen deliveries. In both soleus and gastrocnemius muscles, oxygen delivery correlated with the intramuscular concentrations of phosphocreatine (PCr), lactate, and glycogen. The 31P NMR experiments showed a correlation between oxygen delivery and the steady-state level of PCr/inorganic phosphate (Pi) during the contraction period. The rate of recovery in PCr/Pi after the contraction was also dependent on oxygen delivery. The results demonstrate a causal relationship between oxygen supply and energy state in contracting as well as recovering skeletal muscles.
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PMID:Energy metabolism in relation to oxygen supply in contracting rat skeletal muscle. 378 Sep 97

In muscle phosphorylase deficiency (McArdle's disease) there is an abnormally rapid fatigue during strenuous exercise. Increasing substrate availability to working muscle can improve exercise tolerance but the effect on muscle energy metabolism has not been studied. Using phosphorus-31 nuclear magnetic resonance (31P-NMR) we examined forearm muscle ATP, phosphocreatine (PCr), inorganic phosphate (Pi) and pH in a McArdle patient (MP) and two healthy subjects (HS) at rest and during intermittent maximal effort handgrip contractions under control conditions (CC) and during intravenous glucose infusion (GI). Under CC, MP gripped to impending forearm muscle contracture in 130 s with a marked decline in muscle PCr and a dramatic elevation in Pi. During GI, MP exercised easily for greater than 420 s at higher tensions and with attenuated PCr depletion and Pi accumulation. In HS, muscle PCr and Pi changed more modestly and were not affected by GI. In MP and HS, ATP changed little or not at all with exercise. The results suggest that alterations in the levels of muscle PCr and Pi but not ATP are involved in the muscle fatigue in McArdle's disease and the improved exercise performance during glucose infusion.
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PMID:Muscle fatigue in McArdle's disease studied by 31P-NMR: effect of glucose infusion. 386 26

Intracellular Na+, K+, and Mg2+ concentrations have been measured during the HeLa cell cycle and compared with changes in oxygen utilization and macromolecular synthesis. Cell water content remains relatively constant at 79 +/- 1% during the cell cycle. A biphasic change in intracellular Na+ occurs with low values as cells reach peak S phase and again in early G1. The decrease in S coincides with an increase in cell volume during increased macromolecular synthesis. The fall in intracellular Na+ during mitosis/early G1 coincides with decreased energy utilization as macromolecular synthesis decreases with a continued decrease in [Na+]i in G1 corresponding to a period of increasing cell volume and an increase in protein synthesis. Intracellular Na+ is relatively high during late S/G2 when phosphate incorporation into protein and phospholipid is maximal. Intracellular K+ concentrations largely parallel intracellular Na+ levels although the intracellular K+:Na+ ratio is significantly lower as the cell volume increases during late G2/mitosis. Additions of a Na+-pump inhibitor (strophanthidin) not only caused a rise in [Na+]i and fall in [K+]i but also inhibited protein synthesis. Conversely, addition of a protein synthesis inhibitor (cycloheximide) blocked amino acid incorporation and produces a fall in intracellular Na+ levels. These findings indicate that intracellular Na+ and K+ play an important role in regulating cell hydration during the cell cycle and that changes in Na+, K+-ATPase activity, synthesis and/or utilization of high energy phosphate compounds, fluid phase turnover (endocytosis), Na+:H+ exchange (pHi), Donnan forces, and ionic adsorption may all be involved.
Physiol Chem Phys Med NMR 1984
PMID:Changes in intracellular cations during the cell cycle in HeLa cells. 609 99

Mitochondrial myopathies are a clinical condition characterized by muscle weakness and fatigue in which the primary defect is localized at the level of the mitochondria. Microscopic examination shows accumulations of mitochondria at the fibre periphery (ragged red fibres) and in some cases mitochondrial paracrystalline inclusions. The spectrum of different mitochondrial defects so far described is reviewed and data from cases investigated in this laboratory are described. The first case was a 17-year-old boy with a multisystem disorder whose muscle mitochondria showed low respiratory activity with all substrates, which doubled in the presence of uncoupler. Further investigation showed that the mitochondrial ATPase activity was only 6% of normal. The next cases were a mother and daughter who showed a typical lipid storage myopathy. The latter was treated successfully with oral carnitine but the myopathy persisted. Mitochondrial investigations indicated a low respiratory activity with NAD-linked substrates but normal activity with succinate and ascorbate + TMPD. A defect in the NADH-CoQ reductase section of the respiratory chain was pinpointed possibly at an iron-sulphur centre. The fourth and fifth cases were two sisters who exhibited no lipid storage myopathy but whose mitochondrial activity was low with NAD-linked substrates but normal with succinate. Again a defect in the NADH-CoQ reductase (complex I) of the respiratory chain was determined. They were also investigated using 31P-NMR. It was found after exercise that their muscle creatine phosphate levels took seven times longer to return to pre-exercise concentrations than control subjects. These results are discussed with respect to the synthesis of mitochondrial proteins and the influence that both the mitochondrial and nuclear DNA have on this process.
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PMID:Mitochondrial myopathies: disorders of the respiratory chain and oxidative phosphorylation. 643 47


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