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Query: UMLS:C0015674 (
chronic fatigue syndrome
)
2,978
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We analyzed the plantar support in 72 normal-weight young voluntaries (46 women, 26 men), by a baropodometric platform. We considered subjects with claw foot (
CFS
) and subjects with normal foot (
NFS
). We found a significant reduction of total plantar support surface in the
CFS
(P < 0.0001 for women, P < 0.001 for men), due to the reduction of the forefoot and rear foot areas of both plantar imprints. Indeed,
CFS
of both sexes exhibited higher values of both plantar pressure and peak pressure, compared to the
NFS
. Moreover, the load per units of plantar surface increased in
CFS
compared to the
NFS
. In conclusion, the reduction of plantar support surfaces in
CFS
of both sexes was associated to a major load per units of plantar surface in the forefoot and rear foot areas, and this may be a risk factor to lower extremity overuse injuries.
...
PMID:Plantar pressure distribution analysis in normal weight young women and men with normal and claw feet: a cross-sectional study. 1583 49
This investigation examined the effect of footshock on responses of 283 spinal dorsal horn neurons (DHNs) to urinary bladder distension (UBD). Female rats were treated with seven daily sessions of footshock (chronic footshock,
CFS
), six accommodation sessions followed by one exposure to footshock (acute footshock, AFS) or handled similarly without receiving any footshock (no footshock,
NFS
). After the final footshock or
NFS
session, rats were anesthetized, a laminectomy performed and extracellular single-unit recordings of L6-S1 DHNs obtained in intact or spinalized preparations. Neurons were classified as Type I-inhibited by heterotopic noxious conditioning stimuli (HNCS) or as Type II-not inhibited by HNCS-and characterized for spontaneous activity and for neuronal discharges evoked by graded UBD. A differential effect of footshock-induced stress was noted on neuronal subgroups. In intact preparations, Type I neurons were less responsive to UBD after either chronic or acute stress, while Type II neurons demonstrated significantly augmented responses to UBD. This enhanced neuronal responsiveness to UBD was present in spinalized preparations following exposure to
CFS
but not AFS. Type I neurons were still less responsive to stress in spinalized preparations following
CFS
and AFS. This study provides further evidence that (1) at least two populations of spinal neurons exist which encode for visceral stimuli and are likely to have distinct roles in visceral nociception, and that (2) the chronic stress-induced enhancement of DHN responses to UBD involves changes at the spinal level while the acute stress effects are dependent on a supraspinal substrate.
...
PMID:Footshock stress differentially affects responses of two subpopulations of spinal dorsal horn neurons to urinary bladder distension in rats. 2137 17