Publications by authors named "Dostalek C"

Multichannel EEG, respiration, blood pressure and ECG were recorded during paced breathing at five frequencies in 18 subjects in order to elucidate the effects of paced breathing on power changes in alpha, beta and theta bands, and on rhythmical variability of these parameters. Mean power in the beta band and low-frequency beta power variability (0.12-0.

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Time variation of the EEG spectral parameters was analyzed during a 10 min resting period in 40 healthy subjects. Spectral band powers over the theta and alpha bands were calculated for each non-overlapping 2.5 s long EEG segment.

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Topography of brain electrical activity was studied in 11 advanced yoga practitioners during yogic high-frequency breathing kapalabhati (KB). Alpha activity was increased during the initial five min of KB. Theta activity mostly in the occipital region was increased during later stages of 15 min KB compared to the pre-exercise period.

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We studied cardiovascular and respiratory changes during yogic breathing exercise kapalabhati (KB) in 17 advanced yoga practitioners. The exercise consisted in fast shallow abdominal respiratory movements at about 2 Hz frequency. Blood pressure, ECG and respiration were recorded continuously during three 5 min periods of KB and during pre- and post-KB resting periods.

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Yogic high-frequency respiration--kapalabhati (KB)--was studied in 24 subjects from a point of rhythmicity. Respiratory movements, blood pressure and R-R intervals of ECG were recorded in parallel and evaluated by spectral analysis of time series. Respiratory signals during KB were modulated by 0.

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Jalandharabandha (JB) is the important constituent of apnoea (kumbhaka) in hathayogic breathing exercises. It is performed by pressing the chin into the jugular notch and creating thus the positive pressure on the neck region. The influence of JB on the heart rate and vasomotor response was studied in relationship to different lung volumes.

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Strictly simultaneous eyelid conditioning in human Ss on the one hand and forward (ISI: 0.45 s), backward (ISI: -0.45 s), and pseudoconditioning on the other hand were compared in two different experimental situations: one-session experiment (100 reinforcements, 20 isolated CS randomly interspersed), and ten-sessions experiment (20 reinforcements, 4 isolated CS in each session), UCS was a light flash (0.

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30 young males performed inspiratory breath holdings during expectation of an aversive stimulus and at relative rest. The consecutive R-R intervals of the ECG from breath-hold trial were analysed via spectral analysis of time series. Following parameters were ascertained for each breath holding: mean R-R interval, total R-R interval variability, breath-hold time and relative variability in three spectral bands 3-8 s, 8-12 s and 12-18 s.

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A method for type analysis of learning curves, based on the statistical mixture decomposition, is described. Some critical points in current data-analytic techniques are discussed. The mathematical rationale of the new method is outlined in a brief sketch.

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Concurrent with the performance of hathayogic exercises such as Nauli, Bhastrika and Suryabhedana, three characteristic EEG patterns were identified: a "wicket" rhythm at a frequency wave of 12 to 17 Hz, recordable from para-Rolandic areas, which we have called Xi rhythm; a 26-33 Hz sinusoidal activity, confined to the mid-sagittal parietooccipital region; and paroxysmal activity localized in the lateral boundaries of parieto-temporo-occipital regions, bilaterally. - The expectation that hathayogic exercises would affect the electrical activity of circumscribed, relatively well defined areas of the brain was based on the fact that these exercises imply a strong stimulation of somatic and splanchnic receptors, the afferent impulses of which are fed into specific cortical representation areas localized for the most part around central and anterior parietal areas.

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Agnisara is a Hathayogic exercise consisting essentially in alternate, forceful retractions and protrusions of the abdominal wall, performed along a 20-30 s period of apnoea. In the course of series of Agnisars spindle bursts of a "wicket" EEG wave pattern developed over the para-Rolandic areas of the cerebral cortex, at frequencies around 12-13 Hz, with waxing and waning amplitudes in the range of 50 to 100 microV. These spindle-bursts, which occurred preferably during the phase of retraction of the abdominal wall, were named "Xi" rhythm (after the Greek letter X).

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Excretion of catecholamines, DOPA and their oxidoreduction states were studied during aversive conditioning in a 10-sitting experiment in man. Urinary samples in 3 intervals of 8 h. before respective sitting and 20, 80 and 200 minutes after the sitting.

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