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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Muscle
fatigue
and pain are together common symptoms which can be analysed physiologically. For many patients attending a medical clinic the problem for the doctor is to decide whether the problem is "in the mind" or "in the muscle". A history of the symptoms occurring at rest without any exercise is a hint of psychological origin. Exercise
fatigue
or pain should ideally be reproduced by an appropriate provoking exercise test. Needle biopsy with histochemistry is cost-effective as a means of reaching a diagnosis while blood determinations of erythrocyte sedimentation rate and plasma
creatine kinase
and lactate are more specific but less sensitive indicators of a muscle cause.
Fatigue
is analysed by force and action potential measurements with electrically stimulated contractions. Pain worse after exercise can be related to muscle damage. A programme of therapeutic exercise may be tried as a further means of assessment of these symptoms.
...
PMID:Muscle fatigue and pain. 353 9
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.
...
PMID:Muscular fatigue: effects of hydrogen ions and inorganic phosphate. 353 90
Five women and three men (aged 24-43 yr) performed maximal eccentric contractions of the elbow flexors (for 20 min) on three occasions, spaced 2 wk apart. Muscle pain, strength and contractile properties, and plasma
creatine kinase
(CK) were studied before and after each exercise bout. Muscle tenderness was greatest after the first bout and thereafter progressively decreased. Very high plasma CK levels (1,500-11,000 IU/l) occurred after the first bout, but the second and third bouts did not significantly affect the plasma CK. After each bout the strength was reduced by approximately 50% and after 2 wk had only recovered to 80% of preexercise values. Each exercise bout produced a marked shift of the force-frequency curve to the right which took approximately 2 wk to recover. The recovery rate of both strength and force-frequency characteristics was faster after the second and third bouts. Since the adaptation occurred after the performance of maximal contractions it cannot have been a result of changes in motor unit recruitment. The observed training effect of repeated exercise was not a consequence of the muscle becoming either stronger or more resistant to
fatigue
.
...
PMID:Repeated high-force eccentric exercise: effects on muscle pain and damage. 369 72
This study describes the influence of muscle fiber type composition, enzyme activities and capillary supply on muscle strength, local muscle endurance or aerobic power and capacity. Muscle biopsies were obtained from m. vastus lateralis in thirteen physically active men. Histochemical staining procedures were applied to assess the percentage of fast twitch (FT) fibers, muscle fiber area, and capillary density. Also, the activity of citrate synthase (CS),
creatine kinase
(CK), hexokinase (HK), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH), and phosphofructokinase (PFK) were analysed using fluorometrical assays. Peak torque at 'low' and 'high' angular velocities was measured during leg extension. Similarly, muscle
fatigue
(e.g. peak torque decline) and recovery from a short-term exercise task were measured during maximal, voluntary consecutive leg extensions. Aerobic power (VO2max) and aerobic capacity (e.g. onset of blood lactate concentration; OBLA), as defined by a blood lactate concentration of 4 mol X 1(-1) were measured during cycling. Peak torque at a high angular velocity was positively correlated with % FT area (p less than 0.001).
Fatigue
and recovery were correlated with LDH X CS-1 (p less than 0.001). WOBLA was best correlated with PFK and PFK X CS-1 (p less than 0.001). Hence, muscle strength was partly determined by fiber type composition whereas local muscle endurance, recovery and aerobic capacity reflect mainly capillary supply and the activity of key enzymes involved in aerobic and anaerobic metabolism.
...
PMID:The influence of muscle metabolic characteristics on physical performance. 406 7
The diagnosis of acute mild myocarditis in vaguely defined. Therefore we studied 185 consecutive young men in military service with electrocardiographic changes arousing a suspicion of myocarditis in connection with an acute infectious disease. It was possible to classify 160 patients into seven electrocardiographic groups; definite or probable myocarditis was observed in 104 patients. The electrocardiographic patterns considered characteristic for acute myocarditis were: ST segment elevations followed by T wave inversions; gradually changing T wave inversions not corrected by beta blockade; and ventricular extrasystoles more than 10 per minute triggered by acute infection. Thirty-nine subjects without myocarditis had "functional" T wave abnormalities completely normalised by beta blockade, or stable T wave inversion. The leading symptoms in acute myocarditis were
fatigue
and chest pains; loud S3 gallop, paradoxical cardiac pulsation, pericardial friction rub, or enlargement of the heart were noted altogether in 50% of the patients. Echocardiography disclosed segmental wall motion abnormalities related to the T wave inversions. Serum
creatine kinase
MB fraction increased in 70% of the acute myopericarditis patients during the ST segment elevation stage. In the non-myocarditis groups the clinical and pertinent laboratory findings remained normal. Thus, we noted in clinically mild acute infectious myocarditis clear-cut and early signs of myocardial dysfunction, suggesting that the direct and often local viral invasion of the myocardium is the basic pathogenetic mechanism. The present electrocardiographic classification based on serial tracings and beta blockade proved useful in the evaluation of patients suspected of having mild acute myocarditis.
...
PMID:Evaluation of mild acute infectious myocarditis. 612 67
Isolated extensor digitorum longus muscles from rat were exposed to atmospheres of 30% CO2 (high-CO2 muscles) or 6.5% CO2 (control muscles) in O2 for 95 min. Muscle contraction characteristics were studied before and after the incubation. Tetanic tension decreased in high-CO2 muscles to 55% of initial value but remained unchanged in control muscles. Relaxation time was prolonged in high-CO2 muscles but not in control muscles. Intracellular pH was 6.67 +/- 0.04 (SD) in high-CO2 muscles and 7.01 +/- 0.04 in control muscles. CO2-induced acidosis had a marked influence on the intermediary energy metabolism as shown by a fourfold increase of glucose 6-phosphate, a 14% increase of ADP, and a decrease of phosphocreatine to 44% of the control value. Lactate and pyruvate contents were unchanged. The observed metabolic changes can be explained by an effect of H+ on the activity of phosphofructokinase and on the
creatine kinase
equilibrium. It can be concluded that H+ concentration causes muscular
fatigue
. It is, however, uncertain whether this is an effect of increased H+ per se or by high-energy phosphate depletion induced by acidosis.
...
PMID:Fatigue and phosphocreatine depletion during carbon dioxide-induced acidosis in rat muscle. 640 27
In this study, 65 women and two men were examined because of symptoms suggesting hypothyroidism (eg,
tiredness
,
lack of energy
, weight gain, dry skin, cold intolerance, constipation, galactorrhea, menstrual disturbances). Some also demonstrated biochemical abnormalities (eg, hyperlipoproteinemia, elevation of
creatine phosphokinase
). Serum thyroxine (T4) and triiodothyronine (T3) and T3 uptake were normal in all patients. The thyrotropin-releasing hormone (TRH) test differentiated the patients into two groups: Group 1 (47 patients) had an exaggerated response of thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) to TRH; group 2 (20 patients) had a normal TSH response. Compared with group 2, the group 1 patients had a higher incidence of typical hypothyroid symptoms and goiter and responded more readily to levothyroxine therapy. We concluded that these patients had borderline hypothyroidism. Results of basal thyroid function tests may be within normal limits in such a condition. The TRH test, then, appears to increase diagnostic accuracy and should be routinely performed in patients who have symptoms suggesting hypothyroidism but normal results of basal thyroid function tests.
...
PMID:How to detect hypothyroidism when screening tests are normal. Use of the TRH stimulation test. 641 Mar 62
Patients with neuromuscular diseases have low levels of cardiovascular fitness and they
fatigue
rapidly during daily activities. The purpose of this investigation was to determine whether patients with slowly-progressive or non-progressive neuromuscular diseases could complete a 12-wk training program without untoward responses, and develop cardiovascular training adaptations. All eight patients completed the training program with better than 90% compliance. Resting
creatine kinase
and myoglobin in the group as a whole showed no change with training, though two patients did have definite elevations after training. Their VO2max increased by 25 +/- 5% with training and their relative increase in VO2max was not different from that of healthy subjects undergoing the same training. Heart rate reductions during submaximal exercise were somewhat delayed or non-existent in the two patients with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, a hereditary neuropathy. However, the six patients with myopathies had heart rate adaptations similar to those in healthy subjects. Thus, some patients with slowly-progressive or non-progressive neuromuscular diseases can undergo exercise training and in many cases demonstrate adaptations not different from those in healthy subjects. Patients with different diseases, however, need not respond uniformly, in terms of training adaptations or markers of muscle damage. Therefore, each disease must be considered individually.
...
PMID:Effect of training on the exercise responses of neuromuscular disease patients. 651 64
The technique of nuclear magnetic resonance (n.m.r.) is briefly described to illustrate its use for estimating metabolite levels in vivo. Our studies of
fatigue
in anaerobic frog muscle at 4 degree C are described in relation to (a) force development, (b) speed of relaxation and (c) the switching on and off of glycolysis. Both (a) and (b) are closely related, though in different ways, to the concentrations of key metabolites. In contrast, (c) is not related to metabolite levels as such but to the events of contraction and relaxation. A special n.m.r. technique (saturation transfer) has been used to study the
creatine kinase
system in vivo. The results show that this system is highly active and is in equilibrium in resting muscle. The free [ADP] is consequently only a small fraction of that found by analysis of muscle extracts. Studies of human power production as a function of duration of exercise also indicate that it is shortage of chemical fuel that brings short- and medium-term exercise (0.1-10 min) to a halt. It is proposed to extend n.m.r. methods to human subjects in the near future. A working hypothesis to account for
fatigue
is suggested in which both the contractile system and the activating system play a part.
...
PMID:Shortage of chemical fuel as a cause of fatigue: studies by nuclear magnetic resonance and bicycle ergometry. 691 67
Serum
creatine kinase
(SCK) was measured in ten subjects in the laboratory before and after the performance of bicycle ergometry and a lifting task. SCK was significantly increased 24 h and 48 h after the lifting work but not after the bicycle ergometry, although the work performed on the latter was four-times as great as on the former. The lifting work resulted in muscle pain and tenderness and, for six subjects, in clinical signs of shoulder tendinitis. In a field study, an increase in SCK was noted among assemblers/welders and cash-register operators, but not among controllers and forklift-truck drivers. A health interview revealed that musculo-skeletal complaints were most often located in the upper extremity in the cases of the assemblers/welders and the cash-register operators. It is proposed that the SCK increase during work is a result of a high local muscular load due to
fatigue
and energy depletion of muscle cells producing a greater efflux of muscle enzymes. The evaluation of SCK changes during work may be an important tool in occupational health for early detection of work tasks producing local muscular strain.
...
PMID:Serum creatine kinase as an indicator of local muscular strain in experimental and occupational work. 717 22
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