Normal bladder function requires coordinated detrusor relaxation and urethral sphincter contraction during the filling phase and the reverse during micturition. This is achieved by the integration of excitatory, inhibitory, and sensory nerve activity in control centers in the spinal cord, pons, and forebrain. It is possible that much of bladder pathology is related to disturbances in the vesical ganglia, sensory reflex loops, and central control of micturition.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Inst Pasteur Alger
June 2001
The cryptococcosis is an opportunist infection, frequent during Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrom (A.I.D.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Hemorheol Microcirc
March 2001
We previously reported a higher blood viscosity at corrected hematocrit (45%) (explained by a higher value of erythrocyte rigidity) in football players with low serum zinc (Zn) and thus presumably Zn deficiency; subjects with low serum zinc had also an impairment in performance. This interventional study was undertaken in order to assess the effects of zinc supplementation (compared to placebo) on blood rheology and performance either at rest or during exercise. Ten male healthy volunteers (age: 26+/-1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Hemorheol Microcirc
March 2001
A standardized questionnaire has been proposed by the French consensus group on overtraining of the Société Française de Médecine du Sport (SFMS) and allows the calculation of a 'score' that may help to quantify the early clinical symptoms of the overtraining syndrome in sportsmen submitted to a heavy training program. We investigated a possible relationship between this score and blood rheology in 36 male elite sportsmen (national level in football, volleyball and karate; age: 17-33 yr) who underwent a standardized check-up including biological measurements and an exercise-test. The overtraining score ranged between 0 and 21 items and was correlated with blood viscosity (r = 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Hemorheol Microcirc
October 1998
The life-extending effects of regular exercise are related to a decrease in both coronary and peripheral vascular morbidity, associated with some improvements in cardiovascular risk factors. A possible link between the beneficial metabolic and hemodynamic effects of exercise could be blood rheology, which is markedly affected by exercise. We propose here a description of the hemorheological effects of exercise as a triphasic phenomenon.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSince iron deficiency is associated with abnormal erythrocyte rheology, we investigated relationships between plasma ferritin and blood rheology in 36 male elite sportsmen (age: 22.38+/-0.9 years).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe aimed at investigating relationships between zinc status, blood rheology and blood glucose during exercise. Twenty-one professional football players underwent a triangular maximal exercise test on cycloergometer, with progressively increasing work loads until VO2max. On the whole these subjects had a low serum zinc because nine of them had a hypozincemia (0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF250 patients suffering from pulmonary tuberculosis who were smear positive received a chemotherapy regime for 6 months combining Rifampicin and Isoniazid every day with a daily supplement of Pyrazinamide for the first 8 weeks. The three drugs given in the initial phase of treatment were administered either separately or in combined preparations according to the 2 controlled randomised groups. During the maintenance phase the drugs were given in a combined form in fixed proportions in the 2 groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBull Int Union Tuberc Lung Dis
September 1989
Sera from 77 rodents (Psammomys obesus: 64; Meriones (M.) shawi: 10; M. libycus: 3) trapped in a focus of zoonotic cutaneous leishmaniasis (ZCL) (Leishmania (L.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF250 patients suffering from smear positive pulmonary tuberculosis who had never been treated before, received a six-month regimen combining isoniazid and rifampicin every day with a supplement of pyrazinamide for the first eight weeks of treatment. The three drugs given during the initial phase of therapy were administered in two different forms: either as separate tablets or in a form combining all three drugs in fixed proportions (each tablet contained 50 mg of isoniazid, 120 mg of rifampicin and 300 mg of pyrazinamide). The patients were randomised into two groups of 125 receiving one or other combination of medications with the dose adapted for their weight.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFArch Inst Pasteur Alger
November 1989