Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0015672 (fatigue)
51,768 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The work loop technique was used to measure the mechanical performance in situ of the latissimus dorsi (LD) muscles of rabbits maintained under fentanyl anesthesia. After 3 wk of incrementally applied stretch the LD muscles were 36% heavier, but absolute power output (195 mW/muscle) was not significantly changed relative to that of external control muscle (206 mW). In contrast, continuous 10-Hz electrical stimulation reduced power output per kilogram of muscle >75% after 3 or 6 wk and muscle mass by 32% after 6 wk. When combined, stretch and 10-Hz electrical stimulation preserved or increased the mass of the treated muscles but failed to prevent an 80% loss in maximum muscle power. However, this combined treatment increased fatigue resistance to a greater degree than electrical stimulation alone. These stretched/stimulated muscles, therefore, are more suitable for cardiomyoplasty. Nonetheless, further work will be necessary to find an ideal training program for this surgical procedure.
...
PMID:Mechanical properties of rabbit latissimus dorsi muscle after stretch and/or electrical stimulation. 926 33

Exercise and electrical stimulation may result in a decrease in carnitine levels associated with preconditioned latissimus dorsi muscles. Therefore, the effects of exogenous carnitine were studied in a model of latissimus dorsi muscle contraction. Twelve dogs were studied. Under anesthesia, the latissimus dorsi was placed around an implantable mock circulation system. The muscle was made fatigue-resistant with the aid of chronic low-frequency electrical stimulation. Six animals received carnitine 0.15 mmol/kg; the other six served as control. The muscles were stimulated with 20, 43, and 85 Hz pulse training. During the 90-minute stimulation period, the pressure that developed in the mock circulation was measured at 15 minute intervals. The changes in ATP and lactate levels were measured every 30 minutes. Stimulations at 20 and 43 Hz did not result in any change in pressure or metabolic data over the course of 90 minutes of stimulation. When the 85 Hz burst was applied, ATP levels decreased, while lactate levels increased, with an associated drop in pressure in the control group. ATP and lactate levels were, respectively, 13.8 +/- 1.4 mumol/g and 15.0 +/- 4.0 mumol/g in the carnitine group and 10.3 +/- 1.1 mumol/g and 23.0 +/- 3.0 mumol/g in the control group at the end of 90 minutes (p < 0.06). The pressure at the same time interval was 74 +/- 4 mmHg in the control group, and 85 +/- 3 mmHg in the carnitine group (p < 0.05). In this study, we demonstrated that carnitine administration enhances muscle performance in terms of metabolic and pressure changes during high-frequency electrical stimulation at 85 Hz.
...
PMID:Effects of carnitine on preconditioned latissimus dorsi muscle at different burst frequencies. 927 34

By the end of 1995, a total of 79 occupationally acquired HIV cases had been documented worldwide among health care workers. As part of a larger study on the sexual and occupational risks of HIV among Dutch expatriates, 99 medical professionals (48 physicians and 51 nurses, midwives, or anesthesia assistants) who had worked in AIDS-endemic areas were identified. 96% of physicians and 92% of nurses had last worked in sub-Saharan Africa--typically in rural areas or refugee camps. When tested upon return to the Netherlands, none of these health care professionals was HIV-infected. However, 71% of physicians and 51% of nurses experienced at least one percutaneous exposure (mean number, 2.0 and 1.9, respectively) during an average stay abroad of 2.3 and 1.2 years, respectively. 235 of the 337 accidents described involved solid needles. Given an estimated HIV prevalence in the patient population of 19%, an HIV transmission per accident of 0.3%, and 1.9 percutaneous exposures per year, the occupational HIV risk per health worker per year in countries with high HIV prevalence can be estimated as 0.11%. Most injuries occurred during routine acts and tended to be self-inflicted as a result of negligent needle disposal, recapping errors, cleaning materials for reuse, carelessness due to fatigue, or rushing. Accidents with solid needles were significantly more likely to occur if more procedures were performed, the stay abroad was longer, co-workers were local, and management consisted of local personnel. Worry about occupational exposure to HIV was reported to occur sometimes in 68% of physicians and nurses, regularly in 12%, and often in 6%. HIV prevention programs for health workers should address not only how to prevent occupational exposure, but also how to prepare for the emotional responses to exposure and the consequences this may have for sexual behavior.
...
PMID:Occupational risk of HIV infection among western health care professionals posted in AIDS endemic areas. 982 64

The parameters of fatigue have been studied in recent years in relation to women's health and the childbearing period. Less research emphasis has been placed on second stage labor, a period of time that can encompass considerable physiologic and psychologic fatigue. Consideration to minimizing second stage labor fatigue by altering conventional support practices is needed. This includes minimizing long periods of strong pushing or bearing down efforts in conjunction with sustained breath holding, particularly for women receiving epidural anesthesia. The potential sequelae of second stage labor fatigue, recommendations for practice changes, and new research directions are discussed.
...
PMID:Maternal fatigue: implications of second stage labor nursing care. 1050 70

In this study, the power output and contraction length of trained and untrained canine latissimus dorsi (LD) muscles were measured using a roller screw linear muscle actuator (RSLMA). The RSLMA consisted of a roller screw-nut assembly and translation unit to convert the linear pull force of the muscle into an axial displacement of the roller screw. When a cable wound around a spool attached at each end of the roller screw nut was pulled in either direction, the nut was rotated which in turn advanced the roller screw in the axial direction. Under anesthesia, a Telectronics myostimulator (Model 7220) was implanted in the subcutaneous area of the canine left thoracic region with its bipolar intramuscular leads implanted around the thoracodorsal nerve and the distal muscle. A total of 6 dogs went through the myostimulator implantation, followed with 8 weeks of continuous stimulation. After completion of the training, the contraction lengths of the trained and untrained LD muscles were measured, and they were 4.25 and 5.5 cm, respectively, while the instantaneous power outputs were 4.24 and 8 W, respectively. Although untrained muscles could provide much higher instantaneous power immediately following the start of the stimulation, it diminished rapidly. On the other hand, the trained muscle showed prolonged fatigue resistance. The thoracolumbar and humeral approaches in attaching the actuator cable did not show a difference with respect to muscle power output. The trained LD muscle can provide sufficient power in the range of 3-4 W to drive a left heart assist device, but its long-term evaluation awaits development of an appropriate muscle-device interface for chronic in vivo application.
...
PMID:Ex vivo evaluation of a roller screw linear muscle actuator for an implantable ventricular assist device using trained and untrained latissimus dorsi muscles. 1019 18

Pethidine (meperidine) is a compound with both local anaesthetic and opioid agonist properties. We have in a recent study demonstrated that pethidine could be an interesting alternative to prilocaine in arthroscopy with local anaesthetic technique. Therefore, we investigated, in a controlled randomized double-blind study, the effect of three doses of pethidine compared with a standard local anaesthetic, in patients subjected to arthroscopic knee joint surgery. Ten patients in each group received 50 mg (P50), 100 mg (P100), 200 mg (P200) of pethidine or prilocaine (5 mg/ml) + adrenaline (4 mg/ml) (PC), injected intra-articularly (i.a.) before surgery. We measured pain intensity and discomfort during arthroscopy and pain intensity at rest and at movement, nausea and tiredness for 3 days post-operatively at regular intervals using the VAS-technique. We also measured the concentration of pethidine and its demethylated metabolite, norpethidine, in plasma by collecting blood samples at 20, 40, 60, 80, 140 and 200 min following injection, and in synovial fluid which was collected through the arthroscope at the start and the end of the surgery. It was found that significantly more patients in the P50 group (n = 6) needed general anaesthesia due to intense pain than those in the P100 group (n = 1), P200 group (n = 0) or the PC group (n = 1). The PC group required significantly more analgesics and had a significantly higher calculated total sum of pain scores at movement post-operatively, than the other three groups. The P200 group more often reported tiredness post-operatively than the other three groups. We conclude that 100 or 200 mg pethidine i.a. produces satisfactory anaesthesia for surgery. There was a rapid transfer of pethidine from synovial fluid to plasma, resulting in plasma levels earlier reported to produce centrally mediated effects, such as analgesia and tiredness. We found much higher concentrations of norpethidine in the synovial fluid than in plasma, suggesting a local demethylation in the knee joint tissues. This site of drug oxidation has not earlier been demonstrated neither in vitro nor in vivo. The results suggest that pethidine given i.a. in the dose range of 50 to 200 mg results in analgesia due to both peripheral and central mechanisms. The significant systemic uptake of pethidine can cause unwanted side-effects.
...
PMID:A comparison of 50, 100 and 200 mg of intra-articular pethidine during knee joint surgery, a controlled study with evidence for local demethylation to norpethidine. 1020 35

One hundred and twenty-seven patients undergoing major lower limb joint replacement surgery were studied to determine the incidence of silent myocardial ischemia and to ascertain any link between pre-operative cardiac risk factors, silent myocardial ischaemia and postoperative morbidity. Patients underwent ambulatory ECG monitoring for 4 days (on the pre-operative night and for 3 days postoperatively). Postoperative cardiorespiratory symptomatology and morbidity was assessed by questionnaire at 3 months. Eighty-seven patients had risk factors for silent myocardial ischaemia; 42 patients (30 with risk factors) had peri-operative silent myocardial ischaemia. The median ischaemic loads (range) were 1.04 (0.32-13.31) min.h-1 pre-operatively and 5.53 (0.26-56.39), 6.69 (0.04-42.71) and 1.23 (0.1-53.74) min.h-1 on postoperative days 1-3, respectively. Risk factors did not predict the occurrence of silent myocardial ischaemia or an increased ischaemic load pre-operatively or overall postoperatively. New symptoms (chest pain, palpitations, breathlessness or fatigue) were associated with both silent myocardial ischaemia and ischaemic load (p < 0.05). Thus cardiac risk factors do not predict the occurrence of silent myocardial ischaemia or adverse outcome. Peri-operative silent myocardial ischaemia was associated with increased postoperative fatigue.
Anaesthesia 1999 Mar
PMID:Peri-operative silent myocardial ischaemia in patients undergoing lower limb joint replacement surgery: an indicator of postoperative morbidity or mortality? 1046 May 45

Stress is an inevitable part of our personal and professional lives. When poorly managed, stress will accumulate to levels that become injurious to our health and well-being. Burnout is one such consequence. However, because stress is an active process, with the proper knowledge and skills, we can learn to better manage and control its level of intensity. This paper examines the stress cycle and especially those aspects that are unique to the practice of medicine and anaesthesia. Sleep deprivation and physical fatigue are analyzed as key stressors. The role of the medical marriage and dual-career relationships are scrutinized. The importance of retaining the humanistic essence of medicine is emphasized. Stress management strategies and coping responses, including self-care and humor, are discussed.
...
PMID:The role of stress in anaesthetists' health and well-being. 1040 11

Low-frequency fatigue was investigated in nine female and one male adult pigtail monkeys (Macaca nemestrina) with a mean weight of 5.3 kg (range 4.3 to 6.5 kg). After sedation and anesthesia, silver electrodes were inserted into the anterior and posterior parts of the right masseter muscle. The contralateral muscle was used as a control. The masseter muscles were stimulated for 3 minutes (4 Hz, 2 ms, 100 V). After a 5-minute rest period, the stimulation was repeated with the same duration and voltage but at a higher frequency of 8 Hz. Bite forces were measured, and muscle biopsies were obtained from the central part of the right masseter and immediately frozen in liquid nitrogen. After freeze-drying, a fluorometric analysis that used enzymatic methods for measuring levels of glycogen, glucose, lactate, pyruvate, creatine phosphate, nicotinamide-adenine dinucleotide (NAD), and reduced NAD (NADH) was performed. The bite force decreased by 12% after the initial 3 minutes of work. After the second contraction the bite force decreased to 56%. Prominent substrate depletion was observed. The precontraction levels of glycogen, glucose, and phosphocreatine were all reduced. The NADH and the NAD concentrations increased. An accumulation of metabolites was evident. The pyruvate increased by 32% and lactate levels increased by a factor of 3. The male measurements were comparable to the nine female measures for each assessment. The substantial substrate depletion in combination with a prominent accumulation of metabolites may contribute to the development of low-frequency fatigue.
...
PMID:Frequency-dependent fatigue development during electrical stimulation in the masseter muscle of pigtail monkeys. 1042 74

The present study measured interference-response areas (IRAs) for distortion-product otoacoustic emissions (DPOAEs) at 2f(1)-f(2), 3f(1)-2f(2), and 2f(2)-f(1). The IRAs were obtained in either awake or anesthetized rabbits, or in anesthetized guinea pigs and mice, by sweeping the frequencies and levels of an interference tone (IT) around a set of f(1) and f(2) primary tones, at several fixed frequencies and levels, while plotting the effects of the IT on DPOAE level. An unexpected outcome was the occurrence of regions of suppression and/or enhancement of DPOAE level when the IT was at a frequency slightly less than to more than an octave above f(2). The IRA of the 2f(1)-f(2) DPOAE typically displayed a high-frequency (HF) lobe of suppression, while the 2f(2)-f(1) emission often exhibited considerable amounts of enhancement. Moreover, for the 2f(2)-f(1) DPOAE, when enhancement was absent, its IRA usually tuned to a region above f(2). Whether or not suppression/enhancement was observed depended upon primary-tone level and frequency separation, as well as on the relative levels of the two primaries. Various physiological manipulations involving anesthesia, eighth-nerve section, diuretic administration, or pure-tone overstimulation showed that these phenomena were of cochlear origin, and were not dependent upon the acoustic reflex or cochlear-efferent activity. The aftereffects of applying diuretics or over-exposures revealed that suppression/enhancement required the presence of sensitive, low-level DPOAE-generator sources. Additionally, suppression/enhancement were general effects in that, in addition to rabbits, they were also observed in mice and guinea pigs. Further, corresponding plots of DPOAE phase often revealed areas of differing phase change in the vicinity of the primary tones as compared to regions above f(2). These findings, along with the effects of tonal exposures designed to fatigue regions above f(2), and instances in which DPOAE level was dependent upon the amount of suppression/enhancement, suggested that the interactions of two DPOAE-generator sources contributed, in some manner, to these phenomena.
...
PMID:Suppression and enhancement of distortion-product otoacoustic emissions by interference tones above f(2). I. Basic findings in rabbits. 1051 30


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10