Background: Exercise pulmonary hypertension (ePH), defined as a mean pulmonary artery pressure (mPAP)/cardiac output (Qc) slope >3 WU during exercise, is common in patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). However, the pulmonary gas exchange-related effects of an exaggerated ePH (EePH) response are not well-defined, especially in relation to dyspnea on exertion (DOE) and exercise intolerance.
Methods: 48 HFpEF patients underwent invasive (pulmonary and radial artery catheters) constant-load (20W) and maximal incremental cycle testing.
Background: We identified peripherally limited patients using cardiopulmonary exercise testing and measured skeletal muscle oxygen transport and utilization during invasive single leg exercise testing to identify the mechanisms of the peripheral limitation.
Methods: Forty-five patients with heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (70±7 years, 27 females) completed seated upright cardiopulmonary exercise testing and were defined as having a (1) peripheral limitation to exercise if cardiac output/oxygen consumption (VO) was elevated (≥6) or 5 to 6 with a stroke volume reserve >50% (n=31) or (2) a central limitation to exercise if cardiac output/VO slope was ≤5 or 5 to 6 with stroke volume reserve <50% (n=14). Single leg knee extension exercise was used to quantify peak leg blood flow (Doppler ultrasound), arterial-to-venous oxygen content difference (femoral venous catheter), leg VO, and muscle oxygen diffusive conductance.
Background: In patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), impaired augmentation of stroke volume and diastolic dysfunction contribute to exercise intolerance. Systolic-diastolic (S-D) coupling characterizes how systolic contraction of the left ventricle (LV) primes efficient elastic recoil during early diastole. Impaired S-D coupling may contribute to the impaired cardiac response to exercise in patients with HCM.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe ketogenic diet (KD, also known as metabolic therapy) has been successful in the treatment of obesity, type 2 diabetes, and epilepsy. More recently, this treatment has shown promise in the treatment of psychiatric illness. We conducted a 4-month pilot study to investigate the effects of a KD on individuals with schizophrenia or bipolar disorder with existing metabolic abnormalities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAbsolute total hemoglobin mass (tHbmass) and blood compartment volumes are often considered to be higher in endurance athletes compared with nonathletes, yet little data support a fitness effect in older age. Therefore, we measured tHbmass and blood compartment volumes (carbon monoxide rebreathing) in 77 healthy individuals (23% female; aged, 60-87 yr). Participants were recruited into groups based upon their lifelong (>25 yr) exercise "dose": ) 15 sedentary individuals, <2 sessions/wk; ) 25 casual exercisers, 2-3 sessions/wk; ) 24 committed exercisers, 4-5 sessions/wk; and ) 13 competitive Masters athletes, 6-7 sessions/wk, plus regular competitions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Despite advances in medical and cardiac resynchronization therapy (CRT), individuals with chronic congestive heart failure (CHF) have persistent symptoms, including exercise intolerance. Optimizing cardio-locomotor coupling may increase stroke volume and skeletal muscle perfusion as previously shown in healthy runners. Therefore, we tested the hypothesis that exercise stroke volume and cardiac output would be higher during fixed-paced walking when steps were synchronized with the diastolic compared with systolic portion of the cardiac cycle in patients with CHF and CRT.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Ventricular mass responds to changes in physical activity and loading, with cardiac hypertrophy after exercise training, and cardiac atrophy after sustained inactivity. Ventricular wall stress (ie, loading) decreases during microgravity. Cardiac atrophy does not plateau during 12 weeks of simulated microgravity but is mitigated by concurrent exercise training.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCentral arterial stiffness can influence exercise blood pressure (BP) by increasing the rise in arterial pressure per unit increase in aortic inflow. Whether central arterial stiffness influences the pressor response to isometric handgrip exercise (HG) and post-exercise muscle ischemia (PEMI), two common laboratory tests to study sympathetic control of BP, is unknown. We studied 46 healthy non-hypertensive males (23 young and 23 middle-aged) during HG (which increases in cardiac output [Q̇c]) and isolated metaboreflex activation PEMI (no change or decreases in Q̇c).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The primary cause of dyspnea on exertion in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF) is presumed to be the marked rise in pulmonary capillary wedge pressure during exercise; however, this hypothesis has never been tested directly. Therefore, we evaluated invasive exercise hemodynamics and dyspnea on exertion in patients with HFpEF before and after acute nitroglycerin (NTG) treatment to lower pulmonary capillary wedge pressure.
Research Question: Does reducing pulmonary capillary wedge pressure during exercise with NTG improve dyspnea on exertion in HFpEF?
Study Design And Methods: Thirty patients with HFpEF performed two invasive 6-min constant-load cycling tests (20 W): one with placebo (PLC) and one with NTG.
Background: Exercise intolerance is a defining characteristic of heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). A marked rise in pulmonary capillary wedge pressure (PCWP) during exertion is pathognomonic for HFpEF and is thought to be a key cause of exercise intolerance. If true, acutely lowering PCWP should improve exercise capacity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGlobally, avian colibacillosis is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in poultry, associated with economic losses and welfare problems. Here, clinical avian pathogenic isolates (CEC; = 50) and faecal isolates from healthy (FEC; = 187) Australian meat chickens collected between 2006 and 2014 were subjected to antimicrobial susceptibility testing, phylogenetic grouping, plasmid replicon (PR) typing, multilocus sequence typing, and virulence gene (VG) profiling. Extended-spectrum cephalosporin (ESC)- and fluoroquinolone (FQ)-resistant isolates underwent further genetic characterization.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPurpose: We determined the effect of habitual endurance exercise and age on aortic pulse wave velocity (aPWV), augmentation pressure (AP) and systolic blood pressure (aSBP), with statistical adjustments of aPWV and AP for heart rate and aortic mean arterial pressure, when appropriate. Furthermore, we assessed whether muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) correlates with AP in young and middle-aged men.
Methods: Aortic PWV, AP, aortic blood pressure (applanation tonometry; SphygmoCor) and MSNA (peroneal microneurography) were recorded in 46 normotensive men who were either young or middle-aged and endurance-trained runners or recreationally active nonrunners (10 nonrunners and 13 runners within each age-group).
Cerebrovascular CO reactivity (CVR) is often considered a bioassay of cerebrovascular endothelial function. We recently introduced a test of cerebral shear-mediated dilatation (cSMD) that may better reflect endothelial function. We aimed to determine the nitric oxide (NO)-dependency of CVR and cSMD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHypothesis: Despite advances in understanding the R5 (SSKKSGSYSGKSGSKRRIL) peptide-driven bio-silica process, there remains significant discrepancies regarding the physicochemical characterization and the self-assembling mechanistic driving forces of the supramolecular R5 template. This paper investigates the self-assembly of R5 as a function of monovalent (sodium chloride) and multivalent salt (phosphate) to determine if assembly is phosphate ion concentration dependent. Additionally, we hypothesize that the assembled R5 aggregates do not resemble a micelle or unimer structure as proposed in current literature.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDevelopment of novel multimodality radiotherapy treatments in metastatic breast cancer, especially in the most aggressive triple negative (TNBC) subtype, is of significant clinical interest. Here we show that a novel inhibitor of Polo-Like Kinase 4 (PLK4), CFI-400945, in combination with radiation, exhibits a synergistic anti-cancer effect in TNBC cell lines and patient-derived organoids in vitro and leads to a significant increase in survival to tumor endpoint in xenograft models in vivo, compared to control or single-agent treatment. Further preclinical and proof-of-concept clinical studies are warranted to characterize molecular mechanisms of action of this combination and its potential applications in clinical practice.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe measured acute vascular responses to heat stress to examine the hypothesis that macrovascular endothelial-dependent dilation is improved in a shear-dependent manner, which is further modified by skin temperature. Twelve healthy males performed whole body heating (+1.3°C esophageal temperature), bilateral forearm heating (∼38°C skin temperature), and a time-matched (∼60 min) control condition on separate days in a counterbalanced order.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNaively, resolving the black hole information paradox requires microscopic details about quantum gravity. Recent work suggests that, instead, a unitary Page curve can be recovered by adding disorder-averaged replica instantons to the path integral, though their origin is unclear. In this Letter, we show how replica instantons and disorder averaging emerge naturally in an effective theory built from typical microscopic states.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFChanges in the arterial baroreflex arc contribute to elevated sympathetic outflow and altered reflex control of blood pressure with human aging. Using ultrasound and sympathetic microneurography (muscle sympathetic nerve activity, MSNA) we investigated the relationships between aortic and carotid artery wall tension (indices of baroreceptor activation) and the vascular sympathetic baroreflex operating point (OP; MSNA burst incidence) in healthy, normotensive young ( = 27, 23 ± 3 yr) and middle-aged men ( = 22, 55 ± 4 yr). In young men, the OP was positively related to the magnitude and rate of unloading and time spent unloaded in the aortic artery ( = 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNew Findings: What is the central question of this study? Carotid artery peak circumferential strain (PCS) and strain rate attenuate with age, but appear to be modulated by cardiorespiratory fitness status in young males. However, the relationship between habitual endurance exercise (running) and these parameters has not been studied in young and middle-aged men. What is the main finding and its importance? Young and middle-aged runners exhibited elevated PCS and systolic strain rate (S-SR) compared with non-runners, but habitual running did not influence diastolic strain rate (D-SR).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKey Points: Intermittent hypoxia leads to long-lasting increases in muscle sympathetic nerve activity and blood pressure, contributing to increased risk for hypertension in obstructive sleep apnoea patients. We determined whether augmented vascular responses to increasing sympathetic vasomotor outflow, termed sympathetic neurovascular transduction (sNVT), accompanied changes in blood pressure following acute intermittent hypercapnic hypoxia in men. Lower body negative pressure was utilized to induce a range of sympathetic vasoconstrictor firing while measuring beat-by-beat blood pressure and forearm vascular conductance.
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