On 7 August 1954, the world 42 km marathon record holder, Jim Peters, collapsed repeatedly during the final 385 metres of the British Empire and Commonwealth Games marathon held in Vancouver, Canada. It has been assumed that Peters collapsed from heatstroke because he ran too fast and did not drink during the race, which was held in windless, cloudless conditions with a dry-bulb temperature of 28 degrees C. Hospital records made available to us indicate that Peters might not have suffered from exertional heatstroke, which classically produces a rectal temperature > 42 degrees C, cerebral effects and, usually, a fatal outcome without vigorous active cooling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA choice reaction time task was devised, using incongruent colour/word (Stroop-type) and congruent colour/word stimuli. A significant difference was found between reaction times to the two stimulus types with the Stroop-type stimuli eliciting longer reaction times. It is argued that traditional hypotheses about channel limitation can not explain this finding; the suggestion that the delay may lie in the decision-making process is put forward.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Endocrinol (Oxf)
January 1990
The acute effects of submaximal endurance exercise (three consecutive 20-min runs on a treadmill at 50, 60 and 70% of the subjects' maximum oxygen uptake) upon the pulsatile release of LH were compared with those accompanying leisurely strolling for a similar period in seven normally menstruating young women. All trials were conducted during the early to mid-luteal phase, as determined by body temperature patterns, ultrasonic scans of the ovaries, detection of the LH surge in first morning urine specimens, and serial measurements of plasma progesterone. Blood was sampled every 10 min via an indwelling cannula for 8 h before and 12 h after exercise and serum LH measured by radioimmunoassay.
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