Publications by authors named "Flandrois R"

The purpose of this study was to measure the cardiac output using the CO2 rebreathing method during submaximal and maximal arm cranking exercise in six male paraplegic subjects with a high level of spinal cord injury (HP). They were compared with eight able bodied subjects (AB) who were not trained in arm exercise. Maximal O2 consumption (VO2max) was lower in HP (1.

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Male Wistar rats were subjected to 12.5 days of weightlessness aboard Cosmos 1887. Histomorphometric and biochemical analyses were investigated in soleus (SOL), plantaris (PL) and extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscles of flight rats (group F) and compared with data from two groups of terrestrial controls: one group living free in a vivarium (group V) and another subjected to a flight simulation except for the state of weightlessness (group S).

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In addition to its well-known ventilatory effect, a small rise in pulmonary arterial pressure or pulmonary vascular resistance is occasionally observed with chronic administration of almitrine. In order to test the hypothesis of enhancement of exercise pulmonary vasoconstriction by almitrine, mongrel dogs were studied at rest and during submaximal exercise before and after 4 weeks of chronic ingestion of almitrine (10 mg/kg). It was shown that resting pulmonary arterial pressure (PAP) remained unchanged by almitrine treatment.

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The aim of the present investigation was to determine, by quantitative electron microscopy, the effects of a 5-wk tail-suspension period on rat soleus muscle ultrastructure. A marked decline (-60%) in muscle mass occurred. The mean fiber cross-sectional area decreased to a greater extent (-75%) than the capillary-to-fiber ratio (-37%), leading to a higher capillary density (+148%) after hypokinesia.

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Thermal balance was studied in 11 boys, aged 10-12 years, with various values for maximal oxygen uptake (VO2max), during two standardized sweating tests performed in a climatic chamber in randomized order. One of the tests consisted in a 90-min passive heat exposure [dry bulb temperature (Tdb) 45 degrees C] at rest. The second test was represented by a 60-min ergocycle exercise at 60% of individual VO2max (Tdb 20 degrees C).

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Seven male Wistar rats were subjected to 7 days of weightlessness on the Soviet biosatellite Cosmos 1667. Muscle histomorphometry and biochemical analyses were performed on the soleus (SOL) and extensor digitorum longus (EDL) of flight rats (group F) and compared with data from three groups of terrestrial controls: one subjected to conditions similar to group F in space except for the state of weightlessness (group S) and the others living free in a vivarium (V1, V2). Relative to group V2 (its age and weight-matched control group), group F showed a greater decrease of muscle mass in SOL (23%) than in EDL (11%).

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The effects of training alone or in combination with long-term, non-selective, beta-adrenergic blockade on histochemical and biochemical properties of fast-twitch [extensor digitorum longus muscle (EDL)] and slow-twitch [soleus muscle (Sol)] muscle were analyzed in spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR) and normotensive Wistar-Kyoto strain rats (WKY). Fiber type distribution of Sol was drastically modified in SHR with fewer type I fibers and more type IIA fibers. No such histochemical alterations were observed in EDL.

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During the last two decades, numerous investigations have been conducted to determine the degree of involvement and mechanism of action of various factors responsible for ventilatory adaptation to exercise in human. The neuromechanical ventilatory system plays a role, exercise ventilation representing a compromise between the necessity of maintaining an adequate level of chemical arterial stimulus and of avoiding mechanical overload and, consequently, respiratory fatigue. The role of arterial chemoreceptors is essential and that of muscular chemoreceptors likely.

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The purpose of this study was to compare the effects of spontaneous recovery or recovery by treadmill training (180 min/day, 5 days/wk, 30 m/min for 8 wk) on maximal O2 uptake (VO2max), histochemical and biochemical muscular properties (soleus), of rats subsequent to 5 wk of hindlimb suspension. Spontaneous recovery reversed the 15% reduction in VO2max, whereas training posthypokinesia induced a 20% increase over control values. In the spontaneous recovery group, both citrate synthase and 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase activities, decreased by hypokinesia (-40%), increased but remained 20% below the control level.

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The importance of gluconeogenic substrates (i.e., lactate, glycerol, and alanine) in the glycogen resynthesis observed in fasting rats after exhausting submaximal exercise [R.

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The purpose of this study was to investigate alterations in structural and functional properties in the soleus (SOL) and extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscles of rats after 1, 2, and 5 wk of tail suspension. Maximal O2 uptake was 19% lower after 5 wk suspension. Loss of muscle mass was greater in SOL (63%) than in EDL (22%) muscle.

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To determine adaptation to prolonged exercise in paraplegics, maximal O2 uptake (VO2max) and lactate threshold (LT) were evaluated during an arm cranking exercise in nine patients (P) and nine able-bodied (AB) subjects. Mean VO2max averaged 25.1 and 31.

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The sympathoadrenal contribution to cardiorespiratory response elicited by hypoxia and/or exercise was assessed in the dog. The increased plasma norepinephrine (NE) and dopamine (DA) levels which follow hypoxia (fraction of inspired O2 equals 0.12) while epinephrine (E) remained unchanged ruled out the possibility of a primacy of the adrenal medulla in the response to hypoxia.

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To investigate the relationship between dopamine (DA) released into the bloodstream and sympathoadrenal activity, levels of free DA, norepinephrine (NE), and epinephrine (E) in plasma were recorded in four dogs subjected to three tests: treadmill exercise at two work levels [55 and 75% maximal O2 uptake; 15 min], normobaric hypoxia (12% O2; 1 h), combined exercise and hypoxia. Normoxic exercise induced slight nonsignificant decreases in the arterial partial pressure of O2 (PaO2), increases in NE [median values and ranges during submaximal work vs. rest: 1086 (457-1,637) vs.

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The fast component of the ventilatory changes that occur at the transition phases of exercise was studied in awake dogs trained to run on a treadmill. Two questions were examined: firstly, is the fast ventilatory component modified by changes in venous return to the lungs, such as those consecutive either to increased work loads or to beta adrenergic blockade?, and secondly, is this component altered by central ventilatory depressants? The results showed that at the onset of exercise, there is no correlation between the instantaneous increment in ventilation and the intensity of exercise, but at the end of the treadmill run, the fall in ventilation is closely linked to the power of the work performed. Ventilatory transients observed either at the start or at the end of exercise remain unaffected by administration of a beta-adrenergic blocking agent.

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The influence of exercise on blood borne substrates in relation to plasma catecholamine (CA) levels has been studied in untrained subjects (eight men and eight women). Subjects pedalled a bicycle ergometer for 20 min at a workload approximating to 80% maximal aerobic power. During exercise women reacted similarly to men except that their weight loss and hematocrit were significantly lower.

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1. Maximal oxygen uptake (VO2 max) was determined in 451 boys and girls ranging from 11 to 16 years and divided in two groups. Group I (n = 287) was considered as an untrained reference group.

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The influence of vagal fibres from the lung on ventilatory responses to hypercapnia, hypoxia and exercise was studied in two intact dogs (C) and two chronically lung denervated dogs (C.L.D.

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Awake dogs were studied before (control) and after chronic bilateral carotid denervation (denervated) at rest and running for 3 min on a treadmill at 8 km . h-1 and at various grades, in an altitude chamber operated either at 140 m or at 4000 m for 3 h. Steady-state pulmonary ventilation (Vg) and breathing pattern (VT, fR), oxygen consumption (MO2), O2 concentrations (C) and pressures (P) in the arterial (a) and mixed venous blood (v), hematocrit (Ht) and acid-base status in arterial blood, and heart frequency (fH) were measured.

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O2 chemoreflex drive of ventilation was studied before and after an intravenous infusion of L-norepinephrine (9 microgram/min), inducing a plasmatic hormone concentration similar to that obtained during submaximal exercise. The ventilation increasing rapidly at the beginning of the infusion was stabilized after 30 min : the ventilation was two times the reference value. The O2 chemoreflex drive of ventilation increased during norepinephrine infusion.

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The urinary excretion of dihydroxyphenylalanine (DOPA), catecholamines (CA) [dopamine (DA), norepinephrine (NE), and epinephrine (e)], their 3-O-methylated derivatives [3-O-methyldopamine (3-MT), normetanephrine (NMN), and metanephrine (MN)], and their deaminated metabolites [dihydroxyphenylacetic acid (DOPAC) and vanilmandelic acid (VMA)] was studied in six healthy men, at rest during short-term (15 min) or exhaustive submaximal exercise, and in the 2-h postexercise recovery period. During short-term exercise only NE and VMA excretions increased, whereas in postexercise period only DA output was enhanced. Exhaustive muscular work induced a rise in NE and E excretion during the test, and an increase in DA, NE, and NMN urinary levels during postexercise recovery, while the output of deaminated metabolites was unaltered.

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