Pflugers Arch
December 2017
Exercise induces release of cytokines and increase of circulating natural killers (NK) lymphocyte during strong activation of respiratory muscles. We hypothesised that non-fatiguing respiratory muscle loading during exercise causes an increase in NK cells and in metabolic stress indices. Heart rate (HR), ventilation (VE), oesophageal pressure (Pes), oxygen consumption (VO), dyspnoea and leg effort were measured in eight healthy humans (five men and three women, average age of 31 ± 4 years and body weight of 68 ± 10 kg), performing an incremental exercise testing on a cycle ergometer under control condition and expiratory flow limitation (FL) achieved by putting a Starling resistor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFOocyte selection based on the brilliant cresyl blue (BCB) staining test has been successfully used to differentiate between competent and incompetent bovine oocytes. Here, the expression of genes involved in transport of monocarboxylates (Mct1-4) and oogenesis specific genes (Bmp15, Gdf9 and Has2) in BCB+ and BCB- selected immature and mature bovine cumulus-oocyte complexes (COC) was evaluated. In order to find specific molecular markers to characterize successful oocyte maturation, our study was also aimed at identifying the expression of Mcts and oogenesis specific genes in denuded oocytes and cumulus cells.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSixteen patients with stable asthma performed a symptom-limited constant work-rate CWR cycle exercise during which breathing pattern, operating lung volumes, dyspnea intensity and its qualitative descriptors were measured. An inflection in the relation between tidal volume (V(T)) and ventilation (V˙(E)) was observed in each subject. The sense of "work/effort" was the dominant dyspnea descriptor selected up to the V(T)/V˙(E) inflection, whereas after it dyspnea intensity and the selection frequency of "unsatisfied inspiration" rose steeply in 37.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Sleep apnea syndrome (SAS) is a frequent disorder in acromegalic patients and its frequency ranges from 45 to 87.5% of patients. Obstructive SAS is the prevailing form in acromegaly and its pathogenesis is based on craniofacial deformations and thickening of soft tissues and mucosas of upper airways and bronchi.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: Whether dyspnea, chest wall dynamic hyperinflation, and abnormalities of rib cage motion are interrelated phenomena has not been systematically evaluated in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Our hypothesis that they are not interrelated was based on the following observations: (i) externally imposed expiratory flow limitation is associated with no rib cage distortion during strenuous incremental exercise, with indexes of hyperinflation not being correlated with dyspnea, and (ii) end-expiratory chest wall volume may either increase or decrease during exercise in patients with COPD, with those who hyperinflate being as breathless as those who do not.
Methods: Sixteen patients breathed either room air or 50% supplemental O2 at 75% of peak exercise in randomized order.
The role of nonrespiratory peripheral afferents in dyspnea perception has not been fully elucidated yet. Our hypothesis is that fatigue-induced activation of limb muscle metaboreceptors served by group IV fine afferent fibers may impact on respiratory effort perception. We studied 12 healthy subjects breathing against progressive inspiratory resistive loads (10, 18, 30, 40, and 90 cmH(2)O x l(-1) x s) before and after inducing low-frequency fatigue of quadriceps muscle by repeating sustained contractions at > or = 80% of maximal voluntary contraction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFLittle is known about the effects of exercise on the sensory and cognitive aspects of coughing evoked by inhalation of tussigenic agents. The threshold for the cough reflex induced by inhalation of increasing nebulizer outputs of ultrasonically nebulized distilled water (fog), an index of cough reflex sensitivity, was assessed in twelve healthy humans in control conditions, during exercise and during voluntary isocapnic hyperpnea (VIH) at the same ventilatory level as the exercise. The intensity of the urge to cough (UTC), a cognitive component of coughing, was recorded throughout the trials on a linear scale.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Immunopathol Pharmacol
March 2010
In chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) patients airway mucosa is infiltrated by macrophages and T lymphocytes, potentially reactive to pathogens. We studied the antigen-specificity and the effector functions of in vivo activated T lymphocytes isolated from BAL (Bronchoalveolar lavage) of 5 Moraxella catarrhalis (Mc)-infected and 5 Mc-non-infected COPD patients. Mc-specific T cells were detected only in BAL or peripheral blood of Moraxella catarrhalis-infected patients.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDespite the growing evidence supporting the use of biventricular cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT) in patients with chronic heart failure (CHF), the mechanisms whereby acute hemodynamic improvements lead to improved exertional dyspnea are not precisely known. We hypothesized that improved cardiac function and ventilation-perfusion relations following CRT would reduce ventilatory demand, thereby improving dynamic operating lung volumes and enhancing tidal volume expansion during exercise. This, in turn, would be expected to reduce perceived exertional dyspnea and contribute to improved exercise performance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFExpiratory muscle loading results in increased perception of respiratory effort; this response is mediated by non-vagal reflexes originating in the chest wall. Furosemide, due to its vagal effect, might not affect the perception of respiratory effort during expiratory flow-limited incremental exercise. In this study, we compared in nine healthy subjects the following determinants of exercise performance such as respiratory effort (Borg), workload (W'), ventilation (V'E), tidal volume (VT), respiratory frequency (f), and mean inspiratory flow (VT/TI), an index of central respiratory drive, during either standard incremental cycling exercise, or expiratory flow-limited incremental exercise.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntroduction: Length-tension and force-velocity characteristics of respiratory muscles and hyperinflation are the likely determinants of dyspnea in subjects exercising under hyperbaric conditions. We hypothesize that hyperinflation plays a minor role and that the reduced velocity of shortening of the respiratory muscles modulates dyspnea for any given pleural pressure.
Methods: We studied five normal subjects who performed an incremental exercise test on a cycloergometer in both normobaric (SL) and hyperbaric (4 ATA) conditions.
Background: There is no obvious link between qualitative descriptors and overall intensity of dyspnea during bronchoconstriction in patients with asthma.
Aims: To determine whether qualitative and quantitative perception of methacholine-induced bronchoconstriction independently contribute to characterizing clinically stable asthma.
Material And Methods: We assessed changes in inspiratory capacity, and quantitative (by Borg scale) and qualitative (by a panel of eight dyspnea descriptors) sensations of dyspnea at 20 to 30% fall in FEV(1) during methacholine inhalation in 49 asthmatics.
This study hypothesises that regardless of the global score of dyspnoea intensity, different descriptors may be selected by asthmatic patients during short cardiopulmonary exercise test (sCPET) and methacholine (Mch) inhalation. It also examines whether different qualitative dyspnoea sensations can help explain the underlying mechanisms of the symptom. Minute ventilation (V'E), tidal volume (VT) and inspiratory capacity (IC) were measured in 22 stable asthmatic patients, and the sensation of dyspnoea during Mch inhalation and sCPET was quantitatively (Borg scale) and qualitatively (descriptors) assessed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and sexually transmitted infections (STI) are prevalent among men who have sex with men (MSM).
Goal: To estimate the prevalence of HIV and STIs in this group.
Study: A total of 694 MSM were tested for HIV, hepatitis B (HBV), hepatitis C (HCV), human T-cell lymphotropic (HTLV-I/II) viruses and Treponema pallidum infection.
Aims: We used for the first time a non-invasive optoelectronic plethysmography to assess breathing movements and to provide a quantitative description of chest wall kinematics during phonation.
Methods: Volumes of different chest wall compartments (abdomen and lung apposed to rib cage and abdomen) were assessed using optoelectronic plethysmography in 16 normal Italians (eight men) during reading, singing and high-effort whispering (HW).
Results: During phonation the breathing pattern was different from quiet breathing and exercise.
To our knowledge no data have been reported on the contribution to acute increase in dyspnea by the respiratory muscles in obese nonsmoking subjects. To better focus on this topic, we studied seven obese subjects and an age-matched normal control group, assessing baseline pulmonary function, breathing pattern, esophageal pressure (Pes), and gastric (Pga) and transdiaphragmatic (Pdi) pressures. Pes was also recorded during a sniff maneuver (Pessn).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFEur J Appl Physiol
October 2005
To determine the effects of exercise with expiratory flow-limitation (EFL) on systemic O(2) delivery, seven normal subjects performed incremental exercise with and without EFL at approximately 0.8 l s(-1) (imposed by a Starling resistor in the expiratory line) to determine maximal power output under control (W'(max,c)) and EFL (W'(max,e)) conditions. W'(max,e) was 62.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe hypothesized that walking at increased speed or increasing gradient might have different effects on chest wall kinematics and respiratory muscle power components, and contribute differently to respiratory effort sensation. We measured the volumes of chest wall compartments by optoelectronic plethysmography, esophageal, gastric and transdiaphragmatic ( P(di)) pressures, and the sensation of the respiratory effort by a Borg scale in five normal subjects walking both at ascending gradient with constant speed (AG) and at ascending speed with constant gradient (AS). Chest wall kinematics, evaluated by displacement of chest wall compartments, did not show any significant difference between AS and AG.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe present study was designed to verify whether during hypercapnic stimulation, as we had previously found during exercise or walking, the partitioning of the respiratory motor output is equally distributed to the muscles of chest wall compartments to assist diaphragm function. We studied chest wall kinematics and respiratory muscle recruitment in seven healthy men during rebreathing of a hypercapnic-hyperoxic gas mixture (CO(2) RT). Data were compared with those previously obtained during either cycling exercise or walking.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Studies suggest that the increased volume of both abdominal and rib cage compartments of the chest wall contribute to dyspnea during methacholine-induced airway narrowing.
Material: Eight male patients with asthma aged 34 +/- 13 years (mean +/- SD) before and during methacholine challenge.
Methods: The volume of the chest wall (Vcw), volume of the abdomen (Vab), and volume of the rib cage (Vrc) were measured by using a three-dimensional optoelectronic plethysmography.
Objective: To determine human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) seroprevalence in a sample of men who have sex with men (MSM) in Buenos Aires City and to identify risk factors associated with HIV type 1 infection.
Methods: Participants were invited to receive HIV counselling and testing at "NEXO" (a gay non-governmental organization) by means of informative leaflets distributed in gay nightclubs, porno cinemas, gymnasiums, and in the streets. During the encounter, the study was explained by a trained social worker and individuals were invited to volunteer for the study.
Chest wall compartment kinematics and respiratory muscle coordinate activity, during either hypercapnia or hypoxia, have not been comparatively assessed in healthy humans. We assessed the displacement volume of the chest wall (Vcw) in 5 normal subjects during hypoxic-normocapnic and hypercapnic-hyperoxic rebreathing by using linearized magnetometers. Vcw was divided into displacement volumes of the rib cage (Vrc) and the abdomen (Vab).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFStudy Objectives: Inspiratory capacity (IC) has been proposed as a simple method to assess acute changes in functional residual capacity (FRC) with bronchodilation, assuming that total lung capacity (TLC) is unchanged. This assumption is based on studies using body plethysmography, which may not accurately measure TLC in severely obstructed subjects. The aim of this study is to validate the use of IC measured by optoelectronic plethysmography (OEP) [ICOEP], a noninvasive technique capable of computing changes in absolute lung volumes with great accuracy.
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