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Query: UNIPROT:P06889 (
Mol
)
630,302
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
1. The effect of mental arithmetic tasks on ventilation, breathing pattern, oxygen intake and
carbon dioxide
output was studied during air breathing and
carbon dioxide
rebreathing in healthy subjects. 2. Ventilation and breathing frequency increased significantly on performance of the task during 4 min air breathing and 4 min rebreathing; tidal volume was unchanged. The slopes of the ventilatory, frequency and tidal volume responses to
carbon dioxide
changed little during task performance. 3. During 15 min air breathing, oxygen intake was unchanged with task performance.
Carbon dioxide
output increased significantly with task performance, as a result of wash-out of
carbon dioxide
from body stores by the increased ventilation. 4. Mental arithmetic had no effect on the coefficients of variation of the slope and position variables of the ventilatory, frequency and tidal volume responses to
carbon dioxide
. It is concluded that task performance does not improve the reproducibility of these responses.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1977 Mar
PMID:Interaction of mental factors with hypercapnic ventilatory drive in man. 84 58
1. The oxygen affinity in vitro, haematological indices, erythrocyte 2,3-diphosphoglycerate and plasma inorganic phosphate were determined in 20 patients with chronic ventilatory failure and in 20 healthy non-smokers of similar age. 2. No significant difference was observed between the mean oxygen affinity or phosphate concentrations of the patients and healthy subjects but the mean haemoglobin and packed cell volume were significantly higher in the patients. 3. There was a positive correlation between plasma and intraerythrocytic pH which was similar in both patients and healthy subjects. 4. The arteriovenous difference in oxygen saturation in vivo (directly measured at cardiac catheterization) correlated closely with that calculated from the individual patient's oxygen affinity determined in vitro and arterial and mixed venous oxygen and
carbon dioxide
tensions, suggesting that oxygen affinity in vitro accurately reflects the curve in vivo.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1977 Mar
PMID:Oxygen affinity in vivo and in vitro in chronic ventilatory failure. 84 59
Hemoglobin M Milwaukee (beta67E11 Val leads to Glu) is a naturally occurring valency hybrid containing two permanently oxidized hemes on the beta chains. In this mutant, the two abnormal beta chains cannot combine with ligands whereas the two alpha chains are normal and can combine with oxygen with a Hill coefficient varying from 1.1 to 1.3 [Udem et al. (1970), J
Mol
. Biol. 48, 489]. High-resolution proton nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy at 250 MHz has been used to investigate the exchangeable, ring-current shifted, ferrous and ferric hyperfine shifted resonances of Hb M Milwaukee in the absence and presence of organic phosphates. The alpha-heme environment, as manifested by the ring-current shifted resonances in the liganded form as well as the ferrous hyperfine shifted resonances in unliganded form, and subunit interactions, as manifested by the exchangeable resonances, are similar in Hb M Milwaukee to those in normal adult human hemoglobin. Organic phosphates can partially or completely inhibit the structural transformation which normally accompanies the binding of oxygen or
carbon monoxide
to Hb M Milwaukee. Upon stepwise addition of oxygen to deoxy Hb M Milwaukee, the hyperfine shifted resonance spectra of ferric beta chains show features which cannot be attributed to either fully deoxy or oxy species. However, the spectra for partially oxygenated Hb M Milwaukee can be described as an appropriately weighted average of the spectra of sero, singly, and doubly oxygenated species. The ferric hyperfine shifted resonance spectrum of the singly oxygenated intermediate has been calculated by a method employing least-squares analysis of the spectra of partially oxygenated Hb M Milwaukee at several values of oxygen saturation. The spectrum of this intermediate exhibits features which cannot be accounted for by a two-structure model. The present results are consistent with a sequential model for the oxygenation of this mutant hemoglobin. In view of the similarities between normal adult hemoglobin and Hb M Milwaukee, it is suggested that a two-state concerted allosteric model does not provide an adequate description of the structure-function relationship in normal adult hemoglobin.
...
PMID:Proton nuclear magnetic resonance studies of hemoglobin M Milwaukee and their implications concerning the mechanism of cooperative oxygenation of hemoglobin. 84 26
1. A new open-circuit respiratory method was developed to estimate mixed venous PCO2 more rapidly and accurately than is possible with rebreathing techniques. 2. The subject breathes a mixture of
CO2
in air from an open circuit.
Carbon dioxide
is added to the air flowing through the circuit at a rate such that the PCO2 in the inspired and expired gases (recorded continuously with a
CO2
analyser) are almost identical. 3. Results from respiratory and cardiac patients showed that equilibrium occurred in less than 10 s. There was good agreement between the tensions of
CO2
in the respiratory plateaux and in mixed venous and arterial blood withdrawn during equilibrium. 4. During exercise, the tensions of
CO2
of the plateaux and arterial blood at equilibrium also showed good agreement. 5. It is suggested that the new method represents an improvement over rebreathing methods as equilibrium is achieved rapidly before the mixed venous tension rises from recirculation.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1977 Apr
PMID:A new open-circuit method for estimating carbon dioxide tension in mixed venous blood. 86 33
1. The concentration of metabolites in intercostal and quadriceps muscle, and pulmonary function, were studied in twelve patients with chronic obstructive lung disease and acute respiratory failure before, during and after standardized treatment at an intensive care unit. The findings were compared with those obtained in hospitalized patients of comparable age with non-pulmonary diseases. 2. On admission, when the patients had marked hypoxaemia, hypercapnia and acidosis, the concentrations of ATP and creatine phosphate were low in both intercostal and quadriceps muscle, particularly the latter. The lactate concentration was increased in relation to control values but glycogen did not differ significantly. 3. In response to therapy, the Pa,
CO2
and the patient's acidosis decreased, the vital capacity increased and lung mechanics improved along with the clinical condition. At the same time there were significant increases in the concentrations of ATP, creatine phosphate and glycogen in intercostal and quadriceps muscles, to values similar to, and for glycogen in excess of, those found in control subjects. Lactate concentration fell significantly during treatment. 4. In view of the low initial muscle concentrations of ATP and creatine phosphate in the patients, it is suggested that dysfunction of the respiratory muscles may be an important component of respiratory failure. Moreover, the concentration of energy-rich compounds in muscle rose significantly as the patients responded to treatment, which emphasizes the importance of adequate nutritional therapy in this disorder.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1977 Apr
PMID:Muscle metabolism in patients with chronic obstructive lung disease and acute respiratory failure. 86 35
The phenotype and antiquity of methanogenic bacteria suggest them to have been one of the major factors determining a dynamic balance between
CO2
and CH4 in the primitive atmosphere.
J
Mol
Evol 1977 Aug 05
PMID:A comment on methanogenic bacteria and the primitive ecology. 89 39
1. The pulmonary transfer factor for
carbon monoxide
was measured by the single-breath method in 21 pregnant women with no previous history of cardiac or respiratory disease. Measurements were made at monthly intervals throughout pregnancy and once post partum. 2. The transfer factor was higher in the first trimester of pregnancy than in the non-pregnant state. There was a fall in the transfer factor during pregnancy until 26 weeks gestation, after which no further decrease was observed. 3. The changes in transfer factor were not explained by alterations in haemoglobin concentration or alveolar volume. 4. Simultaneous serial estimation of plasma 17beta-oestradiol were performed in all the subjects. There was no obvious direct relation between changes in the concentration of this hormone and transfer factor measurements.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1977 Sep
PMID:The effect of human pregnancy on the pulmonary transfer factor for carbon monoxide as measured by the single-breath method. 91 50
1. Oxygen breath tests were performed in nine patients with diffuse pulmonary infiltration whose resting arterial PO2 (Pa, O2) ranged from 8-9 kPa to 11-8 kPa. The inspired air was suddenly replaced with oxygen for 30 s and the percentage fall in ventilation over the last 10 s was measured. 2. Pa,O2 rose rapidly and exceeded 16 kPa within 20 s in each patient. 3. The ventilation fell significantly in seven of the nine patients. It is concluded that these seven patients had a demonstrable reflex hypoxic respiratory drive at rest. This tended to be greatest in patients with the lowest Pa, O2. The percentage falls in ventilation observed were similar to those previously reported at comparable Pa, O2 levels in patients with chronic bronchitis. 4. The resting arterial PCO2 (Pa,
CO2
) ranged from 5-0 to 5-8 kPa. It did not change by more than 0-3 kPa during the oxygen breath tests in any patient.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1976 Feb
PMID:Estimation of the resting reflex hypoxic drive to respiration in patients with diffuse pulmonary infiltration. 94 73
1. In healthy, normal subjects simultaneous peripheral venous occlusion of all four limbs caused a small but significant increase in vital capacity (VC) and single-breath
carbon monoxide
transfer factor (DLCO) without significantly changing total lung capacity (TLC), residual volume (RV), pulmonary gas flow or pulmonary compliance. 2. Immersion in water to the neck resulted in a small but significant fall in VC, FEV 1.0/FVC and TLC, and a rise in DLCO, but flow/volume curves and 'closing volume' were unchanged. Peripheral venous occlusion during immersion only significantly increased VC and DLCO; pulmonary compliance and flow/volume curves did not alter significantly. 3. It is concluded that peripheral venous occlusion produces these effects by altering intrathoracic blood volume. Water immersion reduces TLC, mainly from the hydrostatic pressure, and VC is reduced from both the hydrostatic pressure and the increase in intrathoracic blood volume consequent on immersion. The increase in DLCO is due, almost entirely, to the increase in intrathoracic blood volume.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1976 Sep
PMID:Effects of immersion in water and changes in intrathoracic blood volume on lung function in man. 96 60
1. Physiological dead-space volume (V D) was measured in twenty-four healthy men and women aged from 20 to 71 years, at rest and at two rates of work on a treadmill, whilst breathing air and breathing oxygen. 2. The effect of correction of arterial
carbon dioxide
tension (Pa,
CO2
) to pulmonary capillary temperature on the resulting value for V D was investigated. We find that the effect is substantial and that a correction should be made. 3. Equations have been derived for the prediction of normal V D during exercise. The best prediction was given by a regression on height, age,
carbon dioxide
output, ventilation and respiratory frequency, with an upper 95% confidence limit of +81 ml.
Clin Sci
Mol
Med 1976 Oct
PMID:Gas exchange during exercise in healthy people. I. The physiological dead-space volume. 97 73
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