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

Eighteen patients with advanced metastatic gastrointestinal cancer (stomach cancer 7, liver cancer 9, pancreas cancer 2) were treated with human recombinant interferon alpha-2 at doses of 3.0 X 10(6)-10.0 X 10(6) IU/body i.m. daily or every second day, 30 X 10(6) IU/body for five consecutive days every four weeks, or 30 X 10(6) IU/body once weekly. No tumor response was demonstrated in any of our cases. Among fifteen evaluable cases, nine had stabilization of evaluable disease at four weeks, but six showed progressive disease. On the other hand, fever, chills, fatigue, anorexia, nausea and vomiting were pronounced. In two cases, CNS toxicities developed. In some instances, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, decrease of hemoglobin content and elevation of transaminase were observed. According to these findings, single use of recombinant interferon alpha-2 at the dose schedule outlined above does not seem to be of use for the treatment of advanced gastrointestinal cancer.
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PMID:[Phase II studies of interferon alpha-2 Sch 30500 in advanced gastrointestinal carcinoma]. 389 54

Recombinant interferon alpha-2 (Sch 30500) was administered to 29 patients with advanced gynecological cancers (14 patients with cancer of the cervix, 8 with ovarian cancer, 4 with uterine sarcoma, 2 with endometrial cancer and 1 with unclassified cancer). No antitumor effects (CR and PR) were noted in 23 evaluable patients. Side effects observed were fever, tachycardia, diarrhea, chills, general fatigue, anorexia, nausea and vomiting. In some patients, leukopenia, decrease of hemoglobin and elevation of SGOT and SGPT were observed. No production of antibody for Sch 30500 was noted.
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PMID:[Clinical study of recombinant interferon alpha-2 (Sch 30500) in advanced gynecological cancers]. 389 57

A low hemoglobin level or even frank anemia is common among female endurance runners; controversy presently exists on the effectiveness of iron supplementation. In the past inadequate descriptions of training and too infrequent measurement of iron indices over a sufficiently long period, have made it difficult to establish any relationship between iron status and training upon which to base a rational iron therapy. In this study 5 young women distance runners age 18-25 years have been studied for 300 days. A numerical index was used to quantify the extent of an individual's daily training effort and a conceptual model of the effect of training allowed definition of the extent of consequent fatigue, to be calculated. Red blood cell number and hemoglobin concentration were measured regularly throughout, and during the last 200 days serum iron, ferritin, total iron binding capacity and percent transferrin saturation were also measured. It has been shown in most subjects that serum iron and transferrin saturation varied in phase with training and the fatigue index, throughout the period while serum ferritin varied out of phase. It is suggested that supplementing iron intake may be of little use during heavy training and concomitant high fatigue because transferrin saturation is also very high at this time and ineffective in promoting absorption of dietary iron.
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PMID:Variations in iron status with fatigue modelled from training in female distance runners. 401 49

When eight malnourished females without organic disease, were subjected to a controlled treadmill exercise test, they expended less total energy than females of normal body weight. The malnourished subjects consumed less oxygen than the control subjects, but oxygen consumption increased with increasing work load. The resting energy expenditure of the malnourished subjects was less than predicted values, but body composition as determined by muscle mass, total body water and thyroxine levels were within normal limits. Although decreased energy expenditure associated with malnutrition, has been attributed to decreased oxygen transport and altered hemoglobin, the malnourished subjects in this study did not have reduced hemoglobin levels. Metabolic adaptation may have occurred in order to improve the efficiency of aerobic metabolism. In order to confirm this theory, energy expenditure should be assessed under conditions of maximal oxygen intake.
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PMID:Energy expenditure in primary malnutrition during standardized exercise. 646 1

In order to determine the effects of repetitive compression-decompression cycles on hematologic and hemostatic factors in humans, 14 subjects were exposed to 150 ft sea water gauge (fswg) for 30 min with standard U.S. Navy decompression on each of 12 consecutive days. Red blood cell number, volume, and size distribution; hemoglobin concentration; hematocrit; white blood cell number and differential counts; platelet number and volume; prothrombin and partial thromboplastin times; and fibrinogen and fibrin/fibrinogen degradation products were measured in venous blood samples collected before the first and after alternate dives. Subjects in the study had no symptoms other than pruritus and occasional fatigue following the exposures. More than 60% had venous gas emboli detectable by precordial doppler monitoring which generally persisted for 3-5 h after surfacing. Results show a small decrease in red cell mass, with an increase in size distribution and no change in mean corpuscular volume. No change in total white cell number was noted, but the basophilic granulocytes and atypical lymphocytes were elevated at the end of the series. A biphasic change was noted in monocyte number, and immature neutrophilic granulocytes were reduced. No change in platelet number or volume, or in the prothrombin/partial thromboplastine time, was apparent. Although fibrinogen concentration significantly decreased during the exposures, fibrin/fibrinogen degradation products remained undetectable. All changes remained in a clinically acceptable range.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Hematologic and hemostatic changes with repetitive air diving. 646 54

To evaluate the degree of physical activity in hemodialysis patients, working capacity was assessed by bicycle ergometry in 16 hemodialysis patients (mean age 47 +/- 12 [SD] years). The mean length of dialysis treatment was 21 +/- 17 months. The laboratory and clinical findings were as follows (mean values +/- SD): urea 34 +/- 6 mmol/l; creatinine 1127 +/- 169 mumol/l; potassium 5.7 +/- 0.63 mmol/l; calcium 2.25 +/- 0.22 mmol/l; phosphate 1.76 +/- 0.54 mmol/l; hemoglobin 8.54 +/- 1.02 g/dl; hematocrit 26.1 +/- 2.9%; blood pressure 140 +/- 18/86 +/- 9 mm Hg; nerve conduction velocity 39.5 +/- 6.5 m/sec. Mean working capacity was 58 +/- 31 W (41 +/- 24% of normal values) and the specific working capacity (watts/kg body weight) was 0.79 +/- 0.54. The duration of exercise testing was 4.9 +/- 2 min. The ergometry had to be discontinued because of the following reasons: leg fatigue (10 patients); general fatigue (3); dyspnea (1); attainment of maximal heart rate (2). The maximal blood pressure during exercise testing was 149 +/- 21/86 +/- 14 mm Hg and the maximal increase in heart rate 117 +/- 34 beats/min. In patients treated with a beta-blocker agent for hypertension, maximal increase in blood pressure was comparable to normotensive patients. There was a negative correlation between working capacity and the age of the patients (r = 0.77; p less than 0.01). A positive correlation was found between working capacity and the serum creatinine level (r = 0.52; p less than 0.05).
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PMID:[Ergometrically determined work capacity in chronic hemodialysis treatment]. 649 68

To evaluate the effect of breathing 50 ppm carbon monoxide (CO) on exercise capacity in persons with anemia, 10 nonsmoking subjects with chronic anemia (mean hemoglobin 8.9 g%) were studied. No subject had heart or lung disease. By double-blind, randomized, crossover design, duration of fatigue-limited exercise after breathing CO and purified air for 1 hr was compared. Mean carboxyhemoglobin levels increased from 2.14 to 3.38% after breathing CO and decreased from 2.15 to 1.86% after breathing purified air, P less than 0.004. Mean exercise duration decreased from 270.8 to 221.0 sec after breathing CO in contrast to an increase from 267.9 to 271.6 sec after breathing purified air, P less than 0.0001. Hence, in the absence of clinical heart or lung disease, increasing carboxyhemoglobin concentrations aggravate exercise performance in nonsmokers with chronic anemia.
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PMID:Aggravation of exercise performance in patients with anemia by 3% carboxyhemoglobin. 651 Mar 89

The aim of the present study was to investigate the metabolic base of psychoneurological symptoms, most notably tiredness and loss of concentration ability, appearing after carbohydrate-rich meals and during oral glucose tolerance tests. Such metabolic changes may be the cause of many accidents attributed to the "human factor". Oral glucose tolerance tests (OGTT) were performed in healthy volunteers, divided into symptomatic (n = 21) and symptom-free (n = 15) groups. Since the symptoms arising during OGTT simulate those in alcohol intoxication, a method for clinical examination of alcohol intoxication was used to separate symptom-free from symptomatic subjects. Comparison of blood glucose concentrations during OGTT revealed the symptomatic group to have higher concentrations in blood samples taken 15 min (p less than 0.05), 30 min (p less than 0.01), 45, 60 and 90 min (p less than 0.05) after intake of glucose than those having no symptoms. The symptoms began when the glucose concentration was at maximum, some 38 min (mean value) following the ingestion of glucose. The symptomatic subjects demonstrated a normal assimilation rate of glucose (mean 1.7 %/min) as tested with intravenous glucose tolerance tests and the differences in blood glucose concentrations between the groups is concluded to depend on the rate of absorption of glucose from the intestinal tract. The enterochromaffine cells of the intestinal tract are the site of biosynthesis, storage and release of 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) (serotonin). In whole blood practically all of the 5-HT is of thrombocytic origin. Thrombocytes are thought to be peripheral models of 5-HT neurons in regard to 5-HT uptake, storage release and metabolism. Thrombocytes have a mechanism for 5-HT uptake analogous to the reuptake mechanism for 5-HT in the serotonergic nerve terminals. The whole blood 5-HT changes parallel changes in the 5-HT concentrations of the neurons. In this work 5-HT concentrations were measured during OGTT in whole blood to ascertain the possible relation between 5-HT changes and glucose absorption. For this purpose a reliable, fluorometric method for 5-HT was developed with the following improvements: In whole EDTA-blood the oxidation of 5-HT was prevented with ascorbic acid. The oxidation of hemoglobin iron to ferri-iron was prevented with carbon monoxide, because 5-HT, being a phenol, will otherwise form a complex with ferri-iron. Proteins were precipitated with perchloric acid and the supernatant neutralized before purification of 5-HT by cation exchange.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Role of 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) in oral glucose intolerance. 658 28

Oxygen transport to and substrate turnover in leg muscle were studied at rest and during light and heavy upright bicycle exercise in two brothers with a hereditary hemoglobinopathy associated with high oxygen affinity (P50 = 13 mmHg). Femoral venous oxygen tension was below normal and femoral venous oxygen saturation above normal at rest and during exercise. Thus, the arterial-femoral venous oxygen saturation difference was decreased. Despite a compensatory increase in hemoglobin concentration, the arterial-femoral venous oxygen content difference tended to be below normal at heavy exercise. Approximately 25% of the oxygen was delivered via the abnormal hemoglobin at relative heavy exercise. Arterial lactate levels, lactate release, and muscle lactate concentration were not increased at any level of exercise. Glucose, alanine, pyruvate, and glycerol turnover were essentially normal, but the glycogen and creatine phosphate stores were abnormally depleted at the termination of heavy exercise. The exercise electrocardiogram (ECG) was normal, indicating that myocardial oxygenation was adequate. Muscle-surface oxygen pressure fields were normal at rest (not investigated during exercise). It is concluded that the high oxygen affinity of the hemoglobin in our two subjects did not lead to heart or skeletal muscle hypoxia during heavy exercise, as judged from the ECG and from the leg lactate turnover. Despite the lack of evidence for muscle hypoxia, the subjects experienced leg muscle fatigue and the creatine phosphate and glycogen stores were depleted more than normally.
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PMID:Tissue oxygenation and muscular substrate turnover in two subjects with high hemoglobin oxygen affinity. 663 May 12

To investigate the role of high-intensity intermittent exercise on adaptations in blood volume and selected hematological measures, four male subjects aged 19-23 yr [peak O2 consumption (VO2max) = 53 ml X min-1 X kg-1] performed supramaximal (120% VO2max) cycle exercise on 3 consecutive days. Each exercise session consisted of intermittent work performed as bouts of 1-min work to 4-min rest until fatigue or until a maximum of 24 repetitions had been completed. Measurements on blood samples were made before the exercise period and 24 h after the last exercise session. Plasma volume (PV) estimated using 131I-human serum albumin increased by 11.6% (3,504 vs. 3,912 ml; P less than 0.05). Total blood volume (TBV) based on PV and hematocrit (Hct) values increased by 4.5% (5,798 vs. 6,059 ml; P less than 0.05), whereas red cell volume (RCV) decreased by 6.4% (2,294 vs. 2,147 ml; P less than 0.05). Measurements of hematological indices indicated significant reductions (P less than 0.05) in whole-blood Hct (39.7 vs. 35.5%), hemoglobin concentration (15.5 vs. 13.9 g/100 ml), hemoglobin content (897 vs. 839 g), and red blood cell count (5.15 vs. 4.55 X 10(6) X mm-3). The findings of this study suggest that exercise intensity is a major factor in promoting exercise-induced hypervolemia and that rapid elevations in PV can be induced early in training.
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PMID:Alterations in blood volume following short-term supramaximal exercise. 669 14


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