Acetone, which is exhaled with breath, is a by-product of lipolysis and could be used as a simple, useful indicator of lipolysis in the body because, unlike blood sampling, it can be measured non-invasively and repeatedly. Breath acetone concentration, however, is known to be affected by several factors such as exercise and food. We designed the experiments to evaluate the mixed effect on breath acetone of exercise and food ingestion in order to enhance the usefulness of breath acetone for monitoring fat loss.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe physiological roles of isoprene, which is one of the many endogenous volatile organic compounds contained in exhaled breath, are not well understood. In recent years, exhaled isoprene has been associated with the skeletal muscle. Some studies have suggested that the skeletal muscle produces and/or stores some of the isoprene.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAerobic exercise is widely accepted as a beneficial option for reducing fat in humans. Recently, it has been suggested that molecular hydrogen (H) augments mitochondrial oxidative phosphorylation. Therefore, the hypothesis that inhaling H could facilitate lipid metabolism during aerobic exercise was investigated in the current study by measuring the breath acetone levels, which could be used as non-invasive indicators of lipid metabolism.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKey Points: The ductal system of the pancreas secretes large volumes of alkaline fluid containing HCO concentrations as high as 140 mm during hormonal stimulation. A computational model has been constructed to explore the underlying ion transport mechanisms. Parameters were estimated by fitting the model to experimental data from guinea-pig pancreatic ducts.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Physiol Anthropol
December 2015
Background: Although chest-compression-only cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CCO-CPR) is recommended for lay bystanders, fatigue is easily produced during CCO-CPR. If CCO-CPR can be performed at a lower intensity of exercise, higher resistance to fatigue is expected. Since chest compression is considered to be a submaximal upper body exercise in a steady rhythm and since the unit of load for chest compression is expressed as work rate, we investigated the possibility that peak work rate of the upper body determines the level of exercise intensity during CCO-CPR.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Minute ventilation (V · E) during walking has been shown to be higher in older individuals than in young individuals, but the mechanisms underlying the higher ventilatory response is unclear. Central command and peripheral neural reflex are important neural control mechanisms underlying ventilatory response during exercise. Passive leg movement has been used to exclude the influence of central command due to the lack of voluntary activation of muscles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Although passive walking-like leg movement in the standing posture (PWM) has been used in the clinical field, the safety of PWM has not been fully determined despite the risks of orthostatic intolerance due to standing posture. The aim of the present study was to examine cardiocirculatory response during PWM in healthy young men.
Methods: The subjects (n = 13) spent 5 min in a sitting position and then 5 min in a quiet standing position to determine baseline levels.
To define the stoichiometry and molecular identity of the Cl(-)/HCO(3)(-) exchanger in the apical membrane of pancreatic duct cells, changes in luminal pH and volume were measured simultaneously in interlobular pancreatic ducts isolated from wild-type and Slc26a6-null mice. Transepithelial fluxes of HCO(3)(-) and Cl(-) were measured in the presence of anion gradients favoring rapid exchange of intracellular HCO(3)(-) with luminal Cl(-) in cAMP-stimulated ducts. The flux ratio of Cl(-) absorption/HCO(3)(-) secretion was ∼0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjectives: Mutation in the Pkhd1 gene that encodes a ciliary protein, fibrocystin, causes multiple cysts in the kidneys and liver in the polycystic kidney (PCK) rat, a model for human autosomal recessive PCK disease. To clarify the role of primary cilia in the pancreatic duct, we examined the structure and function of the exocrine pancreas of PCK rats.
Methods: Pancreatic juice and bile were collected from anesthetized rats.
Cellular mechanisms underlying the impairment of pancreatic fluid and electrolyte secretion in diabetes were examined using interlobular ducts isolated from rat pancreas. Fluid secretion was assessed by monitoring changes in luminal volume. HCO3(-) uptake across the basolateral membrane was estimated from the recovery of intracellular pH following an acid load.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To compare how and to what extent ingestion of hydrogen water and milk increase breath hydrogen in adults.
Methods: Five subjects without specific diseases, ingested distilled or hydrogen water and milk as a reference material that could increase breath hydrogen. Their end-alveolar breath hydrogen was measured.
Pancreatic duct epithelium secretes a HCO(3)(-)-rich fluid by a mechanism dependent on cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR) in the apical membrane. However, the exact role of CFTR remains unclear. One possibility is that the HCO(3)(-) permeability of CFTR provides a pathway for apical HCO(3)(-) efflux during maximal secretion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPancreatic duct epithelium secretes HCO(3)(-)-rich fluid, which is dependent on cystic fibrosis transmembrane conductance regulator (CFTR). HCO(3)(-) transport across the apical membrane is thought to be mediated by both SLC26A6 Cl(-)-HCO(3)(-) exchange and CFTR HCO(3)(-) conductance. In this study we examined the relative contribution and interaction of SLC26A6 and CFTR in apical HCO(3)(-) transport.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPancreatic duct cells secrete a HCO(3)(-)-rich (approximately 140 mM) fluid. Using a computer model of the pancreatic duct, Sohma, et al. have demonstrated that the activity of a Cl(-)/HCO(3)(-) exchanger with a 1: 1 stoichiometry at the apical membrane would have to be suppressed in order to achieve such a HCO(3)(-)-rich secretion.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPancreatic duct cells express Na(+)-dependent glucose transporter, SGLT1 and Na(+)-independent glucose transporters, GLUT1, GLUT2, and GLUT8. We examined transepithelial glucose transport by pancreatic duct. Interlobular ducts were isolated from rat pancreas.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTurmeric is widely used in Indian cuisine. The main constituents of turmeric are curcumin and its analogues, which are well-known antioxidant compounds. In the present study, we hypothesized that turmeric in curry might increase bowel motility and activate hydrogen-producing bacterial flora in the colon, thereby increasing the concentration of breath hydrogen.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Physiol Gastrointest Liver Physiol
January 2007
Pituitary adenylate cyclase-activating polypeptide (PACAP) and vasoactive intestinal polypeptide (VIP) have opposite actions on the gallbladder; PACAP induces contraction, whereas VIP induces relaxation. Here, we have attempted to identify key residues responsible for their interactions with PACAP (PAC1) and VIP (VPAC) receptors in the guinea pig gallbladder. We synthesized PACAP-27/VIP hybrid peptides and compared their actions on isolated guinea pig gallbladder smooth muscle strips using isotonic transducers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe purpose of this study was to clarify whether delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) and muscle damage after eccentric exercise (ECC) could affect the ventilatory and circulatory responses at the onset of exercise, and whether those effects would continue after the disappearance of DOMS. Ten males participated in this study. We measured ventilatory and circulatory responses at the onset of exercise, for the first 20 s, during knee extension-relaxation voluntary exercise (VOL) and passive movement (PAS), which was achieved by the experimenter alternatively pulling ropes connected to the subjects' ankles for the same period and frequency as during VOL.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground/aims: Small bowel bacterial overgrowth (SBBO) is defined as an abnormal increase in the number of bacteria in the small intestine, and may be occult in older adults. The aim of this study was to determine whether small bowel bacterial overgrowth (SBBO) is found in healthy older people as a concomitant of normal aging or is seen only in disabled or frail older people, excluding patients with intestinal disease and those who had undergone upper intestinal or gastric surgery.
Methodology: Forty-one relatively healthy older people, aged 74.
Identifying and measuring the ammonia gas that emanates from human skin, which we called skin gas, has been achieved using a modified gas chromatographic system with a nitrogen-selective detector (flame-thermoionic detector: FTD). The skin gas is collected with a home-made sampling probe or bag, which is used to cover the skin surface of a subject's wrist, or a finger, for 5 min. It was proved that ammonia was present in skin gas for healthy persons and patients with hepatic disease.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Acetone is emitted from the skin and acetone concentrations correlate with blood beta-hydroxybutyrate.
Methods: Skin acetone concentrations of 63 patients with diabetes and 32 control subjects were measured by cold trapping followed by gas chromatography.
Results: Skin acetone concentrations of patients with diabetes (188+/-17 ppb; mean+/-SE) were significantly higher than those of the control subjects (87+/-10 ppb, p<0.