It has been shown that when participants are asked to make sensibility judgments on sentences that describe a transfer of an object toward or away from their body, they are faster to respond when the response requires a movement in the same direction as the transfer described in the sentence. This phenomenon is known as the action compatibility effect (ACE). This study investigates whether the ACE exists for volunteers with Alzheimer's disease (AD), whether the ACE can facilitate language comprehension, and also whether the ACE can still be produced if the order of the two events is inverted, that is, whether overt movement can prime comprehension of transfer sentences.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
March 2011
Falls-related injuries in the elderly population represent one of the most significant contributors to rising health care expense in developed countries. In recent years, falls detection technologies have become more common. However, very few have adopted a preferable falls prevention strategy through unsupervised monitoring in the free-living environment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
April 2010
Falls in the elderly have a profound impact on their quality of life through injury, increased fear of falling, reduced confidence to perform daily tasks and loss of independence. Falls come at a substantial economic cost. Tools to quantify falls risk and evaluate functional deficits allow interventions to be targeted to those at increased risk of falling and tailored to correct deficits with the aim of reducing falls rate and reducing ones risk of falling.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFalls among the elderly population are a major cause of morbidity and injury-particularly among the over 65 years age group. Validated clinical tests and associated models, built upon assessment of functional ability, have been devised to estimate an individual's risk of falling in the near future. Those identified as at-risk of falling may be targeted for interventative treatment.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAnnu Int Conf IEEE Eng Med Biol Soc
April 2009
Falls-related injuries in the elderly population are a major cause of morbidity and represent one of the most significant contributors to hospitalizations and rising health care expense in developed countries. Many laboratory-based studies have described falls detection systems using wearable accelerometry. However, only a limited number of reports have tried to address the difficult issues of falls detection and falls prevention in unsupervised or free-living environments.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF120 subjects, 90 hypertensives and 30 age-matched controls, were evaluated by fundoscopy and echocardiography to assess the degree of target organ involvement. The hypertensive patients were divided into 3 groups (mild, moderate, severe hypertension) according to their diastolic blood pressure levels. No significant difference was demonstrated in left ventricular mass among the 3 groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSixteen female patients underwent signal-averaged electrocardiography and radionuclide angiography for the assessment of the resting left ventricular ejection fraction in the course of chemotherapy with mitoxantrone (MTX) for advanced breast cancer. Nine patients had received prior cardiotoxic treatments. Our findings indicate that patients treated with MTX may develop late potentials.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Clin Pharmacol Res
October 1991
The atrial natriuretic factor (ANF) plays an important role in the pathogenesis of congestive heart failure (CHF), by influencing electrolyte and water balance and by modifying peripheral vascular resistance, thus affecting left ventricular performance. Anthracycline derivatives are glycoside antibiotics, active against a wide spectrum of tumours. It is well known that acute and severe dose-related delayed cardiotoxicity constitutes the major limitation to their optimal use.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe relation between heart rate and QT interval is the result of the autonomic nervous system control on cardiac function in healthy adults; accordingly, chronobiological studies have shown that adult subjects have circadian rhythms of heart rate (expressed as R-R interval) and QT interval in phase. We have employed chronobiological methods to study heart rate and QT interval relation in 10 newborn infants, who are known to have an immature cardiac control. Findings from this study indicate that not all the newborns show circadian rhythms of heart rate and QT interval and that when both rhythms are present they do not correlate like in the adults.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA regularly scheduled physical training program seems to have antithrombotic effects. Moreover, the hemostatic changes occurring in patients with coronary artery disease during acute exercise have not been clearly elucidated. Since stress testing is routinely performed in clinical cardiology, it would be helpful to assess whether patients with coronary artery disease are exposed to acute coronary thrombosis during or soon after sustained physical exercise.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Clin Pharmacol Res
April 1990
Since high blood pressure might be more harmful the higher it is and the more it remains above a determined critical value (140/90 mm Hg - 18.7/12.0 k Pa - in the present study), the hyperbaric impact, a measure of the total load exerted on the arterial walls and the total time during the day when blood pressure is elevated above the critical value, have been evaluated.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA family history of hypertension is considered a risk factor for developing hypertension. We studied two groups of normotensive children (aged 14 years): one comprising 14 subjects with family history of hypertension, the other comprising 15 subjects without family history of hypertension. Children were comparable with respect to age, weight, height, body surface area, heart rate, and arterial blood pressure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe purpose of this study was to evaluate how physical conditioning is associated with haemostatic and rheological responses to strenuous exercise. A total of 25 males, divided into two groups differing in exercise fitness (14 sedentary and 11 active), underwent exercise testing on a bicycle ergometer with an initial 25 W workload increasing by the same amount every 3 min. The following variables were evaluated before and after the test: platelet count and aggregability, plasma fibrinogen, fibrinolytic degradation products, viscometry and micro-haematocrit.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChronobiological analysis of the circadian variations of heart rate, ventricular and atrial ectopies, was carried out on 11 patients with previous myocardial infarction matched with 11 controls. Individual circadian rhythms in heart rate were seen in all the control subjects but only in 6 patients with previous myocardial infarction. The behaviour of the individual circadian rhythms of premature beats was not significantly different between the two groups.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInt J Clin Pharmacol Res
July 1987
The use of doxorubicin (Dx) in treating malignancies is limited by a potentially fatal cardiomyopathy. Prevention of this related cardiotoxicity has been attempted either by using doxorubicin analogues such as 4'-epidoxorubicin (4'-EpiDx) or by simultaneous administration of other pharmacological substances. Fifteen patients with breast and lung cancer divided into three groups, treated respectively with Dx alone, Dx and L-carnitine and 4'-EpiDx, were studied to assess the effects of these therapeutic regimens on left ventricular performance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFew papers deal with the chronobiologic characteristics of heart rate in neonates. A better knowledge of this topic could be useful under both clinical and therapeutical point of view. We studied the circadian and ultradian rhythms of heart rate in 10 healthy neonates (5 males and 5 females).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFClin Cardiol
November 1986
It has been suggested that systolic time intervals (STI) can be used to monitor the cardiac effects of antihypertensive treatments and also to evaluate hypertensive patients. STI changes observed in hypertensives have been ascribed to myocardial disease, although they could be due to the existence of a relationship between STI and blood pressure. A group of 37 subjects (18 normotensives and 19 hypertensives) with no signs of heart failure and left ventricular dysfunction were studied to examine the relationship of STI to blood pressure.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe studied reactive hyperemia in a group of patients with heart failure before and after therapy, since changes in the characteristics of muscular blood flow may influence the functional class of these patients. At the same time we evaluated some echocardiographic parameters too. When the patients improved clinically, they showed an increase in muscular blood flow at rest and in percent of fractional shortening and a decrease in peripheral vascular resistance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe measured variations of blood pressure during the day in 46 untreated outpatients (25 hypertensives and 21 normotensives) to assess their circadian patterns. The self-measured blood pressures (autorhythmometry), determined at 08:00, 12:00, 16:00, 20:00 and 23:00 for 40 consecutive days were evaluated chronobiologically from single and population mean cosinors. On the basis of the results, we conclude that it is impossible to propose a common schedule of temporal therapy that will be effective for all hypertensive patients because of the unpredictable circadian behavior of blood pressure in this kind of subjects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe studied the chronobiologic pattern of heart rate, R and T wave voltage, QT interval, and ST segment displacement. Premature atrial and ventricular beats obtained by dynamic electrocardiography, as well as arterial blood pressure measurements obtained by autometry, have also been studied in 131 untreated subjects (25 with hypertension, 28 with major risk factors for coronary artery disease, 9 with coronary artery disease, 37 presumably healthy and 11 shift workers). Our results show the existence of circadian rhythms in heart rate, in the duration of the QT interval and also in the voltage of R and T waves.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods Find Exp Clin Pharmacol
June 1985
The effects of isoproterenal (ISP) and methoxamine (MTX) infusion in 20 asymptomatic subjects with labile T wave were studied. In those treated with ISP the T wave showed an early negative trend and later became clearly positive in 5 subjects. In the majority of the subjects treated with MTX the T wave became positive.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSixteen subjects, mean age 59 +/- 18, 11 normal and 5 with coronary artery disease, all having premature ventricular and/or atrial beats in the standard resting electrocardiogram (ECG), were studied to analyse the chronobiologic parameters of these arrhythmias. Single cosinor analysis of the data obtained by 96-hour ECG performed according to the Holter system, demonstrated: A) significant circadian rhythm in heart rate for all the subjects, with acrophases occurring between 12.56 and 17.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMethods Find Exp Clin Pharmacol
January 1984
Antianginal and antiarrhythmic long term therapy with amiodarone may be associated with side effects, therefore it should be used mainly in short term treatment of severe arrhythmias and acute coronary insufficiency. It is important to assess if any inotropic effect may be produced after intravenous administration of this drug in commonly accepted therapeutic doses (5 mg/kg body weight). To investigate this possibility we studied the effects of amiodarone on blood pressure (BP), on heart rate (HR) and on the maximal velocity of circumferential fiber shortening (Vcf Max).
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