To assess the effects of regular physical activity on muscle functional characteristics of carriers of sickle cell trait (SCT), 39 untrained (U) and trained (T) hemoglobin (Hb)AA (CON) and SCT subjects (U-CON, n = 12; U-SCT, n = 8; T-CON, n = 10; and T-SCT, n = 9) performed a graded exercise and a time to exhaustion (T(ex)) test, and were subjected to a muscle biopsy. Maximal power, total work performed during T(ex), citrate synthase and cytochrome c oxidase (COX) activities, respiratory chain complexes I and IV content, and capillary density (CD), diameter (COD), and surface area (CSA) were upregulated by the same proportion in T-CON and T-SCT compared with their untrained counterparts. These proportionally similar differences imply that the observed discrepancies between U-SCT and U-CON remained in the trained subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Int Soc Sports Nutr
December 2011
Background: Carbohydrates (CHOs), branched-chain amino acids (BCAAs) and caffeine are known to improve running performance. However, no information is available on the effects of a combination of these ingredients on performance and neuromuscular function during running.
Methods: The present study was designed as a randomized double-blind cross-over placebo-controlled trial.
Previous studies have shown that subjects with sickle cell trait (SCT), alpha-thalassemia (alpha-t), and the dual hemoglobinopathy (SCT/alpha-t) manifest subtle, albeit significant, differences during exercise. To better understand such differences, we assessed skeletal muscle histomorphological and energetic characteristics in 10 control HbAA subjects (C), 5 subjects with alpha-t (alpha-t), 6 SCT carriers (SCT) and 9 SCT carriers with alpha-t (SCT/alpha-t). Subjects underwent a muscle biopsy and also performed an incremental maximal exercise and a time to exhaustion test.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis experiment investigated the fatigue induced by a 24-h running exercise (24TR) and particularly aimed at testing the hypothesis that the central component would be the main mechanism responsible for neuromuscular fatigue. Neuromuscular function evaluation was performed before, every 4 h during, and at the end of the 24TR on 12 experienced ultramarathon runners. It consisted of a determination of the maximal voluntary contractions (MVC) of the knee extensors (KE) and plantar flexors (PF), the maximal voluntary activation (%VA) of the KE and PF, and the maximal compound muscle action potential amplitude (Mmax) on the soleus and vastus lateralis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe objectives of the experiment were (i) to characterize the mechanical properties of backpacks and (ii) to study the influence of a flexible backpack on the energetics and kinematics of walking. Twelve subjects walked at different speeds on a treadmill with each of two backpacks loaded with 25% bodyweight, with either a rigid or a flexible link between the body attachment and the suspended loads. A single degree of freedom linear model of the link between the pack and the trunk was used to calculate the stiffness and damping coefficient of the two backpacks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMuscle biopsy is a widely used technique in protocols aiming at studying physical capacities and fiber profiles of athletes, and muscular adaptations to exercise. Side effects of biopsy alone on physiological parameters have recently been pointed out, and we sought to determine whether a single biopsy had effects on the main stride mechanical parameters. Ten male runners performed 4-min runs before and after undergoing a biopsy of their left vastus lateralis muscle.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe purpose of this study was to assess the influence of age and speed on the asymmetry of ground reaction forces (GRFs) and spatiotemporal parameters (STPs) during normal gait in 4- to 10-year-old children. Forty-seven children walked at three speeds on a treadmill dynamometer (ADAL; Tecmachine, Andrézieux Bouthéon, France). Thirty steps were recorded at each speed for each foot for each child.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effects of endurance training in normoxia or in hypoxia on time to exhaustion ( T(lim)) at the work rate corresponding to peak oxygen uptake (VO(2peak)) were examined at sea level in 13 healthy subjects. Before and after training the subjects performed the following: (1) incremental exercises up to exhaustion to determine peak oxygen uptake in normoxia (VO(2peak)N), the percentage of this value at the 4 mmol l(-1) blood lactate concentration (VO(2)4%N) and the work rate corresponding to VO(2peak)N (Pa(peak)N), (2) a 5-min 90% Pa(peak)N exercise followed by a 10-min passive recovery to determine the maximal blood lactate concentration (La(max)) measured during the recovery, and (3) a T(lim) at Pa(peak)N. Training consisted of pedalling 2 h a day, 6 days a week, for 4 weeks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFQT rate dependence is one of the major properties of ventricular repolarization with its circadian and autonomic modulations. The authors postulated that dynamic alterations in QT interval adaptation could help characterize patients with cardiac autonomic alterations, like those with obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS). To assess ventricular repolarization features in patients with OSAS, QT parameters and their dynamicity along RR intervals were compared from 24-hour ECG data of patients with and without this syndrome, assessing cardiac autonomic nervous system equilibrium by means of time-domain and frequency-domain analyses of heart rate variability (HRV).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe aim of this study was to evaluate the influence of arterial oxygen saturation ( SaO(2)) on maximal heart rate during maximal exercise under conditions of acute hypoxia compared with normoxia. Forty-six males were divided into three groups depending on their sea level maximal oxygen consumption ( VO(2max)): high [GH, VO(2max)=64.2 (3.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAmbulatory ECG had been proposed to examine the amplified high resolution signal-averaged electrocardiogram (SAECG). Clinical investigations are required to confirm the predictive value of such a high resolution technique in arrhythmic risk stratification. The prognostic value of ambulatory Holter SAECG was evaluated in 108 postinfarction patients for the purpose of predicting the occurrence of serious arrhythmic (SARR) events (sudden cardiac death [SCD], VT, or VF) in comparison with classical real-time SAECG.
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