20 results match your criteria: "Clinical Physiology and Exercise[Affiliation]"

Patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) display lower slope coefficients of the oxygen uptake (V̇O2) versus work rate (W) relationship (delineating an O2 uptake/demand mismatch) and a poor metabolic flexibility. Because endurance training improves the microvascular network and increases the activity of oxidative enzymes, including one involved in lipid oxidation, endurance training might improve the slope coefficient of the V̇O2 versus W curve and the metabolic flexibility of SCD patients. Endurance training may also contribute to improve patients' post-exercise cardiopulmonary and metabolic recovery.

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Impaired post-sleep apnea autonomic arousals in patients with drug-resistant epilepsy.

Clin Neurophysiol

April 2024

Centre for Sleep Medicine and Respiratory Diseases, Hospices Civils de Lyon, Lyon, France; Lyon Neuroscience Research Center, CNRS UMR 5292 / INSERM U1028 and Lyon 1 University, Lyon, France; Lyon 1 University, Lyon, France. Electronic address:

Objective: Sudden and unexpected deaths in epilepsy (SUDEP) pathophysiology may involve an interaction between respiratory dysfunction and sleep/wake state regulation. We investigated whether patients with epilepsy exhibit impaired sleep apnea-related arousals.

Methods: Patients with drug-resistant (N = 20) or drug-sensitive (N = 20) epilepsy and obstructive sleep apnea, as well as patients with sleep apnea but without epilepsy (controls, N = 20) were included.

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: a free software for analyzing cardiac, vascular and respiratory interactions.

Front Physiol

January 2024

SAINBIOSE U1059, Inserm, Saint-Etienne Jean-Monnet University, Clinical Physiology and Exercise, CHU of Saint-Etienne, Saint-Etienne, France.

Simultaneous beat-to-beat R-R intervals, blood pressure and respiration signals are routinely analyzed for the evaluation of autonomic cardiovascular and cardiorespiratory regulations for research or clinical purposes. The more recognized analyses are i) heart rate variability and cardiac coherence, which provides an evaluation of autonomic nervous system activity and more particularly parasympathetic and sympathetic autonomic arms; ii) blood pressure variability which is mainly linked to sympathetic modulation and myogenic vascular function; iii) baroreflex sensitivity; iv) time-frequency analyses to identify fast modifications of autonomic activity; and more recently, v) time and frequency domain Granger causality analyses were introduced for assessing bidirectional causal links between each considered signal, thus allowing the scrutiny of many physiological regulatory mechanisms. These analyses are commonly applied in various populations and conditions, including mortality and morbidity predictions, cardiac and respiratory rehabilitation, training and overtraining, diabetes, autonomic status of newborns, anesthesia, or neurophysiological studies.

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Ligament Healing After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Rupture: An Important New Patient Pathway?

Int J Sports Phys Ther

October 2023

SFMKS-Lab, Société Française des Masseurs-kinésithérapeutes du Sport.

Recent studies have shown satisfactory functional results after spontaneous healing of a ruptured anterior cruciate ligament (ACL). However, current literature on this topic may exclude important parting selection, outcome measures, and long-term results. Rehabilitation protocols applied in those studies, as well as objective assessments appear far from the usual gold standard after ACL reconstruction.

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Study Objectives: Although recent investigations combining noradrenergic and antimuscarinic drugs have shown promising short-term results to treat obstructive sleep apnea (OSA), the mid-term effect and optimal dosage remain uncertain. The present study aimed to evaluate the effect of 1 week of 5 mg oxybutynin and 6 mg reboxetine (oxy-reb) on OSA versus placebo.

Methods: We performed a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, crossover trial comparing the effect of 1 week of oxy-reb versus 1 week of placebo on OSA severity.

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Prevalence and prognostic value of autonomic neuropathy assessed by Sudoscan® in transthyretin wild-type cardiac amyloidosis.

ESC Heart Fail

April 2021

Cardiology Department, AP-HP (Assistance Publique-Hôpitaux de Paris), Henri Mondor University Hospital, 51 Avenue du Marechal de Lattre de Tassigny, Créteil, F-94010, France.

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigated the prevalence of autonomic neuropathy (AN) in patients with transthyretin wild-type cardiac amyloidosis (ATTRwt-CA) using a device called Sudoscan® that measures skin conductance in hands and feet.
  • Results showed that nearly 50% of ATTRwt-CA patients had reduced skin conductance, indicating a significant prevalence of AN compared to healthy elderly controls.
  • The findings suggest that low skin conductance values are linked to a worse prognosis, making Sudoscan® a useful tool for screening patients at higher risk for complications.
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Article Synopsis
  • Older adults are at a higher risk of severe illness from COVID-19 and must balance the need for physical activity with the need to stay home to avoid infection, as inactivity can severely impact their health and independence.
  • The study aimed to assess how quarantine affected physical activity programs and the overall well-being of older adults, while also exploring alternative physical activity suggestions for them.
  • Through interviews with professionals and older adults involved in physical activity programs, the research found a noticeable decline in seniors participating in group activities even before quarantine, highlighting their continued need for exercise despite challenges.
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Assessing pain in the postoperative period: Analgesia Nociception Indexversus pupillometry.

Br J Anaesth

August 2019

Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, University Hospital, Saint-Etienne, France; Research Team EA 4607, SNA-EPIS, Jean Monnet University, Saint-Etienne, France.

Background: Potential methods for objective assessment of postoperative pain include the Analgesia Nociception Index™ (ANI), a real-time index of the parasympathetic tone, the pupillary light reflex (PLR), and the variation coefficient of pupillary diameter (VCPD), a measure of pupillary diameter (PD) fluctuations. Until now, the literature is divided as to their respective accuracy magnitudes for assessing a patient's pain. The VCPD has been demonstrated to strongly correlate with pain in an obstetrical population.

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Objectives: The aim of this study was to determine whether cognitive reserve in the elderly affects the evolution of cognitive performance and what its relationship is with active lifestyles in later life.

Methods: Cognitive performance was evaluated at baseline and 8 years later in 543 participants of the PROOF cohort, initially aged 67 years. Subjects were categorized as Cognitively Elite (CE), Cognitively Normal (CN) or Cognitively Impaired (CI) at each evaluation.

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Assessing Pain Using the Variation Coefficient of Pupillary Diameter.

J Pain

November 2017

Department of Anesthesia and Intensive Care Medicine, University Hospital, Saint-Etienne, France; Jean Monnet University Research Team EA 4607, SNA-EPIS, Saint-Etienne, France.

Unlabelled: Pupillary diameter (PD) varies under the influence of the sympathetic as well as parasympathetic systems, increasing proportionally with pain intensity. Such variations however, should not be confused with pupillary fluctuations, which refer to the fast and permanent PD fluctuations induced by the ongoing interplay between the sympathetic and parasympathetic systems, which we propose to measure using the variation coefficient of PD (VCPD). This study aimed first at correlating PD, PD increase during a contraction, and VCPD, with pain rated using a numeric rating scale (NRS) during obstetrical labor, and then at comparing such correlations with each other.

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Background: Sudomotor dysfunction is one of the earliest pathophysiologic abnormalities in diabetes. Sudoscan™ (Impeto Medical, Paris, France) was developed as a noninvasive, rapid, and quantitative assessment of sudomotor function and has been shown to be sensitive in the detection of neuropathy. This global collaborative analysis aimed to establish reference values in healthy subjects of different ethnic groups, age, and gender, to define factors potentially affecting results, and to provide standardization of the methodology.

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Study Objectives: Sleep breathing disorder (SBD) may be an important factor in age-related cognitive decline. In a cohort of healthy elderly subjects, we performed an 8-y longitudinal study to assess whether changes in cognitive function occur in untreated elderly patients with SBD and without dementia and the factors implicated in these changes.

Design: A population-based longitudinal study.

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Background: Nighttime traffic noise is associated with sleep disturbances, but sleep fragmentation and sleep-disordered breathing (SDB) have not been demonstrated in individuals living near busy roads.

Methods: We asked 1383 participants to answer a health questionnaire and to undergo 24-h electrocardiogram (ECG). Nocturnal ECG records were used to calculate the very low frequency index (VLFI) interval, a surrogate marker of sleep fragmentation.

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Inter-individual differences in control of alveolar capillary blood volume in exercise and hypoxia.

Respir Physiol Neurobiol

January 2014

Laboratory of Clinical Physiology and Exercise, Department of Health Sciences, University of Milano Bicocca, Via Cadore 48, 20900 Monza, Italy.

We compared by non-invasive technique the adaptive response of alveolar capillary network to edemagenic conditions (exercise and high altitude [HA, PIO2 107mmHg] in subjects with different resting sea level (SL) capillary blood volume (normalized to alveolar volume, Vc/Va): Group 1 (N=10, Vc/Va=16.1±6.8ml/L- mean±SD) and Group 2 (N=10, Vc/Va=25±7.

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Sleep perception in non-insomniac healthy elderly: a 3-year longitudinal study.

Rejuvenation Res

February 2014

1 Department of Clinical Physiology and Exercise, Pole NOL, CHU, and Faculty of Medicine of Saint-Etienne, UJM and PRES University of Lyon, EA 4607 SNA-EPIS, Saint-Étienne, France .

Objectives: Older adults complain of sleep disturbances more often than younger adults do. It is not clear whether the age-related rise in sleep problems is related to aging itself or to health-related quality of life. The aim of this study was to explore the presence of self-reported sleep problems in healthy elderly individuals and to evaluate whether changes occurred over a 3-year follow-up.

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Objective: Some epidemiological data are available on the association between sleep duration and sleep quality, sleep complaints, and the aging related cognitive impairment in the elderly. In this study we examined a large sample of healthy elderly subjects to assess the relationship between sleep quality, subjective cognitive complaints, and neuropsychological performance.

Methods: A total of 272 elderly subjects (mean age 74.

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Sleep apnea syndrome and cognition.

Front Neurol

October 2012

Department of Clinical Physiology and Exercise, Pole NOL, CHU, Faculty of Medicine J, Lisfranc, UJM et PRES University of Lyon Saint-Etienne, France.

Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is a sleep-related breathing disorder characterized by repetitive episodes of airflow cessation resulting in brief arousals and intermittent hypoxemia. Several studies have documented significant daytime cognitive and behavioral dysfunction that seems to extend beyond that associated with simple sleepiness and that persists in some patients after therapeutic intervention. A still unanswered question is whether cognitive symptoms in OSA are primarily a consequence of sleep fragmentation and hypoxemia, or whether they coexist independently from OSA.

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Exercise tolerance is an important parameter in patients with COPD and a primary goal of treatment is to reduce dyspnea to facilitate physical activities and improve health-related quality of life. This review examines the link between expiratory flow limitation and dyspnea to explain the rationale for the use of bronchodilators and review the characteristics of different types of exercise tests, with specific focus on which tests are likely to show a response to bronchodilators. An earlier literature search of studies published up to 1999 assessed the effects of bronchodilatort therapy on dypsnea and exercise tolerance among patients with COPD.

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The aim of the present study was to calculate reference equations for carbon monoxide and nitric oxide transfer, measured in two distinct populations. The transfer factor of the lung for nitric oxide (T(L,NO)) and carbon monoxide (T(L,CO)) were measured in 303 people aged 18-94 yrs. Measurements were similarly made in two distant cities, using the single-breath technique.

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Analysis of the interbeat interval increment to detect obstructive sleep apnoea/hypopnoea.

Eur Respir J

June 2007

Department of Clinical Physiology and Exercise, Faculty of Medicine, Jacques Lisfranc University Jean Monnet, Saint-Etienne, France, and Sleep Laboratory, Department of Psychiatry, University Hospital, Geneva, Switzerland.

The prevalence of obstructive sleep apnoea/hypopnoea syndrome (OSAHS) is underestimated and its diagnosis is costly and restricted to specialised sleep laboratories. The frequency component of interbeat interval increment (III) has been proposed as a simple and inexpensive diagnostic tool in OSAHS. In a set of 150 patients with clinically suspected sleep-related breathing disorder, the actual predictive accuracy of the power spectral density of the III of the very low frequencies (%VLFI) was analysed by comparing with the apnoea/hypopnoea index (AHI), as assessed by synchronised polysomnography.

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