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Keywords Exercise induced tachycardia a...

Exercise induced tachycardia and normal oxygen

https://read.qxmd.com/read/33868018/using-underwater-pulse-oximetry-in-freediving-to-extreme-depths-to-study-risk-of-hypoxic-blackout-and-diving-response-phases
#1
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eric Mulder, Erika Schagatay
Deep freediving exposes humans to hypoxia and dramatic changes in pressure. The effect of depth on gas exchange may enhance risk of hypoxic blackout (BO) during the last part of the ascent. Our aim was to investigate arterial oxygen saturation (SpO2 ) and heart rate (HR) in shallow and deep freedives, central variables, which have rarely been studied underwater in deep freediving. Four male elite competitive freedivers volunteered to wear a newly developed underwater pulse oximeter for continuous monitoring of SpO2 and HR during self-initiated training in the sea...
2021: Frontiers in Physiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31280914/thyrotoxicosis-induced-cardiomyopathy-treated-with-venoarterial-extracorporeal-membrane-oxygenation
#2
Ivo Genev, Michelle D Lundholm, Mary Ann Emanuele, Edwin McGee, Verghese Mathew
A 37-year-old woman with no past medical history presented with longstanding untreated hyperthyroidism and consequentially developed thyrotoxicosis-induced cardiomyopathy. Upon admission, she was noted with a heart rate of 172 beats per minute and an EKG consistent with supraventricular tachycardia which was unresponsive to adenosine. Shortly after the initiation of a non-cardioselective beta-blocker for the treatment of persistent tachycardia, she developed profound cardiogenic shock refractory to vasopressors and inotropes...
March 2020: Heart & Lung: the Journal of Critical Care
https://read.qxmd.com/read/21196188/modulation-of-cardiac-ryanodine-receptor-activity-by-ros-and-rns
#3
REVIEW
Paulina Donoso, Gina Sanchez, Ricardo Bull, Cecilia Hidalgo
Calcium release through cardiac ryanodine receptors (RyR2) triggers heart muscle contraction. Reactive oxygen/nitrogen species (ROS/RNS), normally produced in the heart, promote endogenous RyR2 S-nitrosylation and S-glutathionylation. These reversible redox modifications increase RyR2 activity in vitro, and presumably also in vivo. RyR2 S-glutathionylation increases under physiologically relevant conditions (tachycardia and exercise), suggesting that cardiac cells utilize this redox modification to increase RyR2 activity under increased demand...
2011: Frontiers in Bioscience (Landmark Edition)
https://read.qxmd.com/read/20933199/i-f-inhibition-in-cardiovascular-diseases
#4
REVIEW
Catherine Thollon, Jean-Paul Vilaine
Heart rate (HR) is determined by the pacemaker activity of cells from the sinoatrial node (SAN), located in the right atria. Spontaneous electrical activity of SAN cells results from a diastolic depolarization (DD). Despite controversy in the exact contribution of funny current (I(f)) in pacemaking, it is a major contributor of DD. I(f) is an inward Na(+)/K(+) current, activated upon hyperpolarization and directly modulated by cyclic adenosine monophosphate. The f-proteins are hyperpolarization-activated cyclic nucleotide-gated channels, HCN4 being the main isoform of SAN...
2010: Advances in Pharmacology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/19594908/cardiotoxicity-of-freon-among-refrigeration-services-workers-comparative-cross-sectional-study
#5
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Laila M E Sabik, Reem A Abbas, Mahmoud M Ismail, Safwat El-Refaei
BACKGROUND: Freon includes a number of gaseous, colorless chlorofluorocarbons. Although freon is generally considered to be a fluorocarbon of relatively low toxicity; significantly detrimental effects may occur upon over exposure. The purpose of the present study is to investigate whether occupational exposure to fluorocarbons can induce arterial hypertension, myocardial ischemia, cardiac arrhythmias, elevated levels of plasma lipids and renal dysfunction. METHODS: This comparative cross-sectional study was conducted at the cardiology clinic of the Suez Canal Authority Hospital (Egypt)...
July 13, 2009: Environmental Health
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17631846/-sinus-rhythm-mechanisms-and-function
#6
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Guy Lerebours
The normal cardiac rhythm originates in a specialized region of the heart, the sinus node that is part of the nodal tissue. The rhythmic, impulse initiation of sinus node pacemaker cells results from a spontaneous diastolic depolarization that is initiated immediately after repolarization of the preceding actions potential. This slow diastolic depolarisation is typical of automatic cells and essential to their function. Several currents are involved in this diastolic depolarisation: a hyperpolarization activated inward current, termed "pacemaker" I(f) current, two Ca2+ currents (a L type and a T type), a delayed K+ current and a Na/Ca exchange current...
June 2007: Médecine Sciences: M/S
https://read.qxmd.com/read/17178009/resting-and-postexercise-cardiac-autonomic-control-in-trained-master-athletes
#7
JOURNAL ARTICLE
S J Brown, J A Brown
This study used measures of heart rate variability during recovery from high-intensity exercise in trained Master athletes to examine postexercise cardiac autonomic regulation. Seven males (mean age 52.1 +/- 3.3 yr; mass 85.1 +/- 18.0 kg) and 6 females (mean age 50.5 +/- 2.9 yr; mass 63.1 +/- 6.0 kg) performed incremental exercise to an intensity that induced a >4.5 mmol capillary blood lactate concentration, followed by incremental exercise to volitional exhaustion (VO2(max)). A 6 min ECG recording before (Pre) and after (Post) exercise was analyzed in the time (mean rr interval, sd rr) and frequency domains (total power, very low frequency [VLF: 0-0...
February 2007: Journal of Physiological Sciences: JPS
https://read.qxmd.com/read/15801248/exercise-induced-dyspnea-in-children-and-adolescents-if-not-asthma-then-what
#8
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mutasim Abu-Hasan, Beatrice Tannous, Miles Weinberger
BACKGROUND: Exercise-induced dyspnea (EID) in children and adolescents is a common manifestation of asthma and is therefore commonly attributed to exercise-induced asthma (EIA) when present in otherwise healthy children. OBJECTIVE: To report the outcome of evaluations for EID when other symptoms and signs of asthma were absent or if there was no response to previous use of an inhaled beta2-agonist. METHODS: We reviewed the results of all exercise tests performed in otherwise healthy patients with EID during 1996 to 2003...
March 2005: Annals of Allergy, Asthma & Immunology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/9361245/defective-endogenous-nitric-oxide-mediated-modulation-of-cellular-respiration-in-canine-skeletal-muscle-after-the-development-of-heart-failure
#9
JOURNAL ARTICLE
W Shen, M S Wolin, T H Hintze
BACKGROUND: It is well documented that nitric oxide (NO) suppresses the function of a number of mitochondrial enzymes. Our recent studies found that endogenous NO may play an important role in the modulation of tissue oxygen (O2) consumption and cellular respiration both in vitro and in vivo. METHODS: Tissue O2 consumption was measured by a Clark-type O2 electrode at 37 degrees C in freshly isolated skeletal muscle segments from the accessory head of the triceps brachii (90% type I muscle fiber) and extensor carpi radialis (86% type II muscle fiber) from normal dogs and dogs with tachycardia-induced heart failure...
October 1997: Journal of Heart and Lung Transplantation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/7585753/short-term-effects-of-captopril-on-exercise-tolerance-in-patients-with-chronic-stable-angina-pectoris-and-normal-left-ventricular-function
#10
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
R Steffensen, P Grande, J K Madsen, S Rasmussen, S Haunsø
A double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover study was carried out to evaluate the short-term effects of captopril on exercise tolerance in 18 normotensive patients with chronic stable angina pectoris and normal left ventricular function. Captopril 25 mg (or placebo) was given twice, i.e. in the evening (10 p.m.) and the following morning (8 a.m.), prior to a maximal symptom-limited bicycle exercise test (11 a.m.). Captopril reduced the systolic and diastolic blood pressures at rest (p < 0.01) without causing any reflex tachycardia...
1995: Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/3932470/prevention-of-bedrest-induced-physical-deconditioning-by-daily-dobutamine-infusions-implications-for-drug-induced-physical-conditioning
#11
RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED TRIAL
M J Sullivan, P F Binkley, D V Unverferth, J H Ren, H Boudoulas, T M Bashore, A J Merola, C V Leier
The effects of intermittent infusions of dobutamine were studied in young normal male subjects during a period of bedrest deconditioning to determine whether this synthetic catechol affects physical conditioning processes in humans. 24 volunteers were placed at bedrest and randomized to daily 2-h treatments of saline infusions (control), dobutamine infusions, or maintenance exercise (control). Exercise, hemodynamic, and metabolic studies were performed at base line and at the termination of the 3-wk treatment period...
October 1985: Journal of Clinical Investigation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/3825907/effects-of-exercise-and-nitroprusside-on-left-ventricular-ejection-dynamics-in-idiopathic-dilated-cardiomyopathy
#12
JOURNAL ARTICLE
W G Kussmaul, J P Kleaveland, J L Martin, J W Hirshfeld, W K Laskey
To characterize the abnormal pattern of instantaneous left ventricular (LV) ejection in heart failure, proximal aortic pressure, flow, acceleration, power and dW/dt were measured at rest and during supine bicycle exercise using high-fidelity, catheter-mounted pressure and velocity sensors in 16 patients with idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy (IDC) and 11 normal control subjects. In patients with IDC, peak flow was lower than normal both at rest (454 +/- 155 vs 649 +/- 168 ml/s, p less than 0.01) and during exercise (569 +/- 213 vs 916 +/- 329 ml/s, p less than 0...
March 1, 1987: American Journal of Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/2544623/exercise-intolerance-lactic-acidosis-and-abnormal-cardiopulmonary-regulation-in-exercise-associated-with-adult-skeletal-muscle-cytochrome-c-oxidase-deficiency
#13
JOURNAL ARTICLE
R G Haller, S F Lewis, R W Estabrook, S DiMauro, S Servidei, D W Foster
A 27-yr-old woman with lifelong severe exercise intolerance manifested by muscle fatigue, lactic acidosis, and prominent symptoms of dyspnea and tachycardia induced by trivial exercise was found to have a skeletal muscle respiratory chain defect characterized by low levels of reducible cytochromes a + a3 and b in muscle mitochondria and marked deficiency of cytochrome c oxidase (complex IV) as assessed biochemically and immunologically. Investigation of the pathophysiology of the exercise response in the patient revealed low maximal oxygen uptake (1/3 that of normal sedentary women) in cycle exercise and impaired muscle oxygen extraction as indicated by profoundly low maximal systemic arteriovenous oxygen difference (5...
July 1989: Journal of Clinical Investigation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/2306836/paradoxical-narrowing-of-atherosclerotic-coronary-arteries-induced-by-increases-in-heart-rate
#14
JOURNAL ARTICLE
E G Nabel, A P Selwyn, P Ganz
Vasodilation in normal and vasoconstriction in atherosclerotic coronary arteries have been observed in response to complex stimuli such as exercise and the cold pressor test. To study a single parameter that changes during these activities, and to better understand the pathophysiology of ischemia associated with increases in heart rate, we studied coronary vasomotion and blood flow response to increasing heart rate alone, produced by atrial pacing, with quantitative angiographic and Doppler flow-velocity measurements in 15 patients...
March 1990: Circulation
https://read.qxmd.com/read/1190032/angina-pectoris-with-normal-coronary-arteriograms-hemodynamic-and-metabolic-response-to-atrial-pacing
#15
JOURNAL ARTICLE
P Mammohansingh, J O Parker
Seventeen subjects ranging from 36 to 58 years of age presented with chest pain suggestive of myocardial ischemia. Each patient had a positive double Master's two-step test with ST segment depression of 0.5 mm. or more in the postexercise ECG. In each case coronary angiography and left ventriculography were normal. Hemodynamic and metabolic investigations were carried out during sinus rhythm and atrial pacing. Thirteen patients experienced pain during pacing but only one showed an abnormal hemodynamic response...
November 1975: American Heart Journal
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