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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To clarify the effect of respiratory muscle
fatigue
on ventilatory response to
carbon dioxide
, we performed
CO2
rebreathing study before and after diaphragmatic
fatigue
in nine healthy males. Diaphragmatic
fatigue
was induced by inspiratory resistor loading and confirmed by the increase in Tension Time Index and the decrease in Pdi max at FRC. The effects of diaphragmatic
fatigue
were as follows: 1) S and B value of VE-
CO2
curve did not change. 2) P1-
CO2
curve shifted to the left but the slope of the curve did not change. 3) delta Ppl response to
CO2
decreased, but delta Pdi response to
CO2
did not change. 4) The increase in respiratory accessory muscle EMG was more prominent, compared to diaphragmatic EMG. 5) Rib cage movement became more marked. In conclusion, diaphragmatic
fatigue
(with 60 percent decrease in Pdi max at FRC) does not affect on ventilatory response to
carbon dioxide
. To maintain the homeostasis of the chemical ventilatory feedback system, diaphragmatic dysfunction is compensated by the increased activity of respiratory accessory muscles with possible increase in neural drive.
...
PMID:[Effect of diaphragmatic fatigue on ventilatory response to carbon dioxide]. 130 16
There is considerable debate regarding the ergogenic effects of sodium bicarbonate (NaHCO3) on racing performance in horses. Anecdotal evidence suggests that NaHCO3 improves performance by increasing the buffering capacity of the blood and delaying the onset of hydrogen ion-induced
fatigue
. In a cross-over study, 16 Thoroughbred racehorses were given an aqueous solution of NaHCO3 (0.4 g/kg in 1 litre H2O) or a control treatment (1 litre H2O) before a 1600-m race. Treatments were administered 3 h before the race, which was the time to peak buffering capacity (2.5-3.0 h) determined in a separate study. Before the race, there was a significant increase in venous HCO3- and pH in the NaHCO3-treated horses. After the race, there was a significant increase in venous blood pH and lactate in the NaHCO3-treated horses. Collectively, the data suggest an improved buffering capacity of the blood after NaHCO3 treatment. However, there was no change in race times or venous partial pressure of
carbon dioxide
. Therefore, the administration of NaHCO3 provided no ergogenic benefit to horses competing in a 1,600-m race.
...
PMID:Effects of induced alkalosis on performance in thoroughbreds during a 1,600-m race. 131 65
Carbon monoxide
(CO) poisoning is the commonest single cause of fatal poisoning in the U.K. (Broome & Pearson, 1988). The clinical features are numerous and include headache,
fatigue
, dizziness, confusion, memory loss, paraesthesia, chest pain, abdominal pain, nausea, and diarrhoea as well as coma, convulsions and death. Without adequate treatment many patients develop neuropsychiatric sequelae including headaches, irritability, memory loss, confusion and personality changes. The diagnosis of CO poisoning is often suggested only by circumstances surrounding the victim, and remains a challenge to the A&E department. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBO) is internationally accepted as the most powerful form of treatment in severe cases (Drug & Therapeutics Bulletin, 1988; Lowe-Ponsford & Henry, 1989). However, in the U.K. treatment with HBO is often not considered due to lack of hyperbaric facilities (Meredith & Vale, 1988; Anand et al., 1988), and due to inadequate awareness on the part of hospital staff. We report a case of a patient deeply unconscious as a result of CO poisoning, in which serial treatments with HBO over a period of 14 days, produced dramatic results.
...
PMID:Management of the moribund carbon monoxide victim. 811 Mar 42
With the objective to test the effect of intermittent and short term rest in respiratory muscles in patients with COPD and maintained hypercapnia we have studied 34 patients in a stable condition: 23 were part of the study group (Group I) and 11 were the control group (Group II). After a complete functional basal study, patients in Group I were treated with intermittent rest of their respiratory muscles, through a negative pressure external respirator--shield type--during three consecutive days. We got, in this study group, a significative improvement in the maximum inspiratory pressure measured at residual volume (PI max RV), which went from 66.6 +/- 15.9 to 71.2 +/- 15.2 (p < 0.005), as well as a lowering, also significative, of partial pressure of
CO2
in arterial blood (PaCO2) and in expired air (EFCO2), which went from 55.2 +/- 7.2 to 52.3 +/- 3 (p < 0.0002) and 3.3 +/- 0.5 to 3.1 +/- 0.5 (p < 0.01), respectively. Maximum inspiratory pressure measured to functional residual capacity (PI max FRC) experienced an increase in the limit of statistical signification. Rest of the parameters did not significantly change. These results back the hypothesis that in stabilized COPD with
CO2
retention, a chronic
fatigue
of respiratory muscles could exist, and that intermittent rest of these muscles could mean an hypercapnia diminution, due to the improvement in the function of respiratory muscles.
...
PMID:[Short-term effects of respiration with external negative ventilation --shield-type respirator-- on the pulmonary function in COPD]. 833 62
1. The effects of inducing inspiratory muscle
fatigue
on the subsequent breathing pattern were examined during resting unstimulated breathing and during
CO2
rebreathing. In addition, we examined whether induction of inspiratory muscle
fatigue
alters
CO2
responsiveness. 2. Global inspiratory muscle
fatigue
and diaphragmatic
fatigue
were achieved by having subjects breathe against an inspiratory resistive load while generating a predetermined fraction of either their maximal mouth pressure or maximal transdiaphragmatic pressure until they were unable to generate the target pressure. 3. Induction of inspiratory muscle
fatigue
had no effect on the subsequent breathing pattern during either unstimulated breathing or during
CO2
rebreathing. 4. Following induction of inspiratory muscle
fatigue
, the slope of the ventilatory response to
CO2
was significantly decreased from 18.8 +/- 3.3 during control to 13.8 +/- 2.1 l min-1 (% end-tidal
CO2
concentration)-1 with
fatigue
(P < 0.02).
...
PMID:The effect of inspiratory muscle fatigue on breathing pattern and ventilatory response to CO2. 148 52
1. The performance of skeletal muscle during repetitive stimulation may be limited by the development of an intracellular acidosis due to lactic acid accumulation. To study this, we have measured the intracellular pH (pHi) with the fluorescent indicator BCECF (2',7'-bis(carboxyethyl)-5(6)- carboxyfluorescein) during
fatigue
produced by repeated, short tetani in intact, single fibres isolated from the mouse flexor brevis muscle. 2. The pHi at rest was 7.33 +/- 0.02 (mean +/- S.E.M., n = 29, 22 degrees C). During fatiguing stimulation pHi initially went alkaline by about 0.03 units (maximum alkalinization after about ten tetani). Thereafter pHi declined slowly and at the end of fatiguing stimulation (tetanic tension reduced to 30% of the original; 0.3Po), pHi was only 0.063 +/- 0.011 units (n = 14) more acid than in control. 3. We considered three possible causes of acidosis being so small in
fatigue
: (i) a high oxidative capacity so that
fatigue
occurs without marked production of lactic acid; (ii) an effective transport of H+ or H+ equivalents out of the fibres; a high intracellular buffer power. 4. The oxidative metabolism was inhibited by 2 mM-cyanide in three fibres. After being exposed to cyanide for 5 min without stimulation, the tetanic tension was reduced to about 0.9 Po and pHi was alkaline by about 0.1 units. The fibres fatigued faster in cyanide and the pHi decline in
fatigue
was more than twice as large as that under control conditions. 5. Inhibition of Na(+)-H+ exchange with amiloride resulted in a slow acidification of rested fibres; resting pHi was not affected by either inhibition of HCO3(-)-Cl- exchange with DIDS (4,4'-diisothiocyanatostilbene-2,2'-disulphonic acid) or inhibition of the lactate transporter with cinnamate. 6. Fibres fatigued in cinnamate displayed a markedly larger acidification (approximately 0.4 pH units) and tension fell more rapidly than under control conditions; inhibition of Na(+)-H+ and HCO3(-)-Cl- exchange did not have any significant effect on
fatigue
. 7. The intracellular buffer power, assessed by exposing fibres to the weak base trimethylamine, was about 15 mM (pH unit)-1 in a HEPES-buffered solution (non-CO2 or intrinsic buffer power) and about 33 mM (pH unit)-1 in a bicarbonate-buffered solution. Somewhat higher values of the intrinsic buffer power was obtained from changes of the partial pressure of
CO2
(PCO2) of the bath solution. Application of lactate or butyrate frequently gave an infinite buffer power, which indicates that powerful pH-regulating mechanisms operate in these cases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Changes of intracellular pH due to repetitive stimulation of single fibres from mouse skeletal muscle. 152 20
The purpose of this study was to compare respiratory responses with moderate and slow rates of unsupported arm exercise (UAE) with a newly developed electromechanical device. Twenty-one patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) were studied. Exercise endurance limits, metabolic, ventilatory and sensation outcomes were determined at rest prior to exercise and at end-exercise endurance limits. Increases from baseline rest for both exercise rates were observed in: oxygen uptake,
carbon dioxide
production, inspiratory flow, minute ventilation, respiratory rate, dyspnea, respiratory effort, and arm
fatigue
. Endurance limits were similar for both rates of UAE. These data provide standards against which UAE in COPD can be evaluated.
...
PMID:Standardization of a device to measure unsupported arm exercise endurance in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. 152 10
Endurance muscle performance is highly dependent on ATP production from mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. To study the role of the mitochondrial oxidative enzymes in muscle
fatigue
, we analyzed the relationship between the concentrations of substrates associated with ATP synthesis and the muscle performance of electrically stimulated rabbit muscle under
CO2
-induced acidosis. Two different conditions of pacing-induced muscle performance were produced in the gastrocnemius and soleus muscle groups in anesthetized rabbits by stimulating the sciatic nerve submaximally at two frequencies. Phosphorus nuclear magnetic resonance was used to measure ATP, phosphocreatine, and Pi and to provide data for a calculation of intracellular pH and free ADP. To induce acidosis, the animal was ventilated with 20%
CO2
. The administration of
CO2
effectively reduced the intracellular pH from 6.9 to 6.7 and reduced the isometric tension-time integral (TTI) to below half the value measured in normocapnia at the low pacing frequency. A twofold increase in the pacing frequency resulted in a doubling of the TTI in normocapnia and a tripling of TTI in hypercapnia. The increases in TTI corresponded with increases in free ADP and Pi concentrations. Under the various conditions, all free ADP values were near the in vitro Michaelis-Menten constant (Km) of ADP. The Michaelis-Menten relationship of the oxidative phosphorylative enzymes was applied to the change in substrate concentrations with respect to TTI. From this relationship we observed that the in vivo Km of free ADP was 26 microM, which is close to the in nitro Km, and that Km and maximal reaction velocity did not change under hypercapnia and increased pacing frequency.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Substrate regulation of mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation in hypercapnic rabbit muscle. 155 27
The French incidence study has registered all new cases of Type 1 diabetic children under 20 years of age, from a population of 2.32 million, in an exhaustive and prospective manner. Three hundred and forty cases were identified between 1 January 1988 and 31 December 1989, yielding a mean annual incidence rate 7.3 per 10(5). The lowest rate was observed in the youngest age group (0-4 yr: 4.1 per 10(5)) and the highest around pubertal development (10-14 yr: 11.5 per 10(5)). Details of the previous personal and family history, and the clinical and biological pictures of the disease at diagnosis were recorded. Almost 8 per cent of the children had a first-degree relative with Type 1 diabetes. Polyuria, weight loss,
fatigue
and abdominal pain were the most frequently reported symptoms, which were of median duration 4.4 months. Mean weight loss before diagnosis was 9.4 +/- 6.8 (+/- SD)% of body weight and was not significantly related to age. Ketonuria was detected in 83.8 per cent and acidosis (total
CO2
less than or equal to 18 mmol l-1, if measured) in 48 per cent of the cases. Ketonuria and acidosis were significantly more frequent in the younger age group than in the rest of the group (p less than 0.001).
...
PMID:Clinical and laboratory features of type 1 diabetic children at the time of diagnosis. 157 13
The effects of 3 days of restricted feeding (800 kcal/day) on cigarette consumption, smoke exposure, and mood were studied in five male research volunteers. A within-subjects design was used in which subjects were exposed in an inpatient research unit to either a nutritionally-balanced diet containing 800 kcal (RESTRICTED DIET) or 3,000 kcal (NORMAL DIET) per day for 3 consecutive days. At least 2 weeks separated diet conditions. Dependent measures included number of cigarettes smoked per day in each diet condition, biological exposure levels (
carbon monoxide
and plasma cotinine levels), and mood. Number of cigarettes smoked per day did not differ significantly across diet conditions. Biological exposure to
carbon monoxide
and to cotinine, a metabolite of nicotine indicative of chronic nicotine exposure, also did not differ significantly between conditions.
Fatigue
scores from the Profile of Mood States were significantly elevated in the RESTRICTED DIET condition. Not surprisingly, subjects in this condition also reported feeling more hungry throughout the day than in the NORMAL DIET condition. From our study results, we conclude that a short period of "dieting," and the resulting hunger elicited from such a diet, do not increase cigarette consumption or smoke exposure in humans.
...
PMID:The effects of a restricted feeding regimen on cigarette smoking in humans. 158 42
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