A metabolic limit on the ability to make up for lost time in endurance events. (65/4418)

It has been repeatedly demonstrated that the tolerable duration (t) of high-intensity cycling is well characterized as a hyperbolic function of power (P) with an asymptote that has been termed the "fatigue threshold" and with a curvature constant. This hyperbolic P-t relationship has also been confirmed in running and swimming, when speed (V) is used instead of P; that is, (V - V(F)). t = D', where V(F) is the V at the fatigue threshold, and D' is the curvature constant. Therefore, we theoretically analyzed herein the consequences of an athlete performing the initial part of an endurance event at a V different from the constant rate that would allow the performance time to be determined by the hyperbolic V-t relationship. We considered not only the V-t constraints that limit the athlete's ability to make up the time lost by too slow an early pace but also the consequences of a more rapid early pace. Our analysis demonstrates that both the V(F) and D' parameters of the athlete's V-t curve play an important role in the pace allocation strategy of the athlete. That is, 1) when the running V during any part of the whole running distance is below V(F), the athlete can never attain the goal of achieving the time equivalent to that of running the entire race at constant maximal V (i.e., that determined by one's own best V-t curve); and 2) the "endurance parameter ratio" D'/V(F) is especially important in determining the flexibility of the race pace that the athlete was able to choose intentionally.  (+info)

Cardiac assessment of veteran endurance athletes: a 12 year follow up study. (66/4418)

OBJECTIVES: Sustained aerobic dynamic exercise is beneficial in preventing cardiovascular disease. The effect of lifelong endurance exercise on cardiac structure and function is less well documented, however. A 12 year follow up of 20 veteran athletes was performed, as longitudinal studies in such cohorts are rare. METHODS: Routine echocardiography was repeated as was resting, exercise, and 24 hour electrocardiography. RESULTS: Nineteen returned for screening. Mean (SD) age was 67 (6.2) years (range 56-83). Two individuals had had permanent pacemakers implanted (one for symptomatic atrial fibrillation with complete heart block, the other for asystole lasting up to 15 seconds). Only two athletes had asystolic pauses in excess of two seconds compared with seven athletes in 1985. Of these seven, five had no asystole on follow up. Two of these five had reduced their average running distance by about 15-20 miles a week. One athlete sustained an acute myocardial infarction during a competitive race in 1988. Three athletes had undergone coronary arteriography during the 12 years of follow up but none had obstructive coronary artery disease. Ten of 19 (53%) had echo evidence of left ventricular hypertrophy in 1997 but only two (11%) had left ventricular dilatation. Ten athletes had ventricular couplets on follow up compared with only two in 1985. CONCLUSIONS: Although the benefits of moderate regular exercise are undisputed, high intensity lifelong endurance exercise may be associated with altered cardiac structure and function. These adaptations to more extreme forms of exercise merit caution in the interpretation of standard cardiac investigations in the older athletic population. On rare occasions, these changes may be deleterious.  (+info)

Evaluation of questionnaire-based information on previous physical work loads. Stockholm MUSIC 1 Study Group. Musculoskeletal Intervention Center. (67/4418)

OBJECTIVES: The principal aim of the present study was to evaluate questionnaire-based information on past physical work loads (6-year recall). METHODS: Effects of memory difficulties on reproducibility were evaluated for 82 subjects by comparing previously reported results on current work loads (test-retest procedure) with the same items recalled 6 years later. Validity was assessed by comparing self-reports in 1995, regarding work loads in 1989, with worksite measurements performed in 1989. RESULTS: Six-year reproducibility, calculated as weighted kappa coefficients (k(w)), varied between 0.36 and 0.86, with the highest values for proportion of the workday spent sitting and for perceived general exertion and the lowest values for trunk and neck flexion. The six-year reproducibility results were similar to previously reported test-retest results for these items; this finding indicates that memory difficulties was a minor problem. The validity of the questionnaire responses, expressed as rank correlations (r(s)) between the questionnaire responses and workplace measurements, varied between -0.16 and 0.78. The highest values were obtained for the items sitting and repetitive work, and the lowest and "unacceptable" values were for head rotation and neck flexion. Misclassification of exposure did not appear to be differential with regard to musculoskeletal symptom status, as judged by the calculated risk estimates. CONCLUSIONS: The validity of some of these self-administered questionnaire items appears sufficient for a crude assessment of physical work loads in the past in epidemiologic studies of the general population with predominantly low levels of exposure.  (+info)

The relationship between waist-to-hip ratio and occupational status and life-style factors among middle-aged male and female Japanese workers. (68/4418)

As a marker of body fat distribution and therefore level of obesity, the waist-to-hip ratio (W:H) is a good indicator of coronary heart disease risk status. The present study investigated the association between occupational status and life-style factors, and W:H of middle-aged Japanese male (n = 2,550) and female (n = 1,283) workers in a metal-products factory. A higher W:H was observed in the management level males as compared with the other male workers and we suggest this was promoted by the sedentary aspect of their work, as well as their higher levels of alcohol consumption and lower levels of leisure-time physical activity. In contrast, a higher W:H was recorded in female labourers, whose work was typically less sedentary as compared with female managers. Life-style factors included in the study were not related to this observation. We conclude that other unmeasured psychosocial factors may be important in promoting higher W:H in female labourers.  (+info)

Effects of ifenprodil and baclofen on exercise-induced increase of myocardial oxygen demand in normotensive rats. (69/4418)

Central glutamatergic relays are known to be present in the central sympathetic pathways. Ifenprodil (an N-methyl-D-aspartate antagonist) and baclofen (a gamma-aminobutyric acid(B) agonist) are both modulators of these synapses; we previously reported their ability to reduce the cardiovascular responses induced by a central hypothalamic stimulation in rabbits. In this work, we investigated the actions of chronic treatments with these two drugs on the increase of myocardial oxygen demand induced by exercise in normotensive rats. Moreover, their effects on the baroreceptor heart rate reflex were observed. Male normotensive WKY rats were treated with placebo (two groups), baclofen, or ifenprodil for 14 days. They were then submitted to a progressively increased exercise test on a treadmill. In another three groups of animals, the same treatment was applied but, at the end, a baroreflex study was performed by the injection of phenylephrine (vagal component of the reflex) and of sodium nitroprusside (sympathetic component). Ifenprodil and baclofen reduced by nearly 50% the level of the increase of the rate x pressure product during exercise as compared with control rats. This effect appeared to be mainly due to a reduction of the hypertensive response. In the same conditions, neither baclofen nor ifenprodil significantly altered the baroreceptor heart rate reflex. The fact that these two drugs are capable of reducing the myocardial oxygen demand encourages us to test them in a model of myocardial ischemia associated with sympathetic hyperactivity.  (+info)

Artificial selection for increased wheel-running activity in house mice results in decreased body mass at maturity. (70/4418)

To test the hypothesis that body size and activity levels are negatively genetically correlated, we conducted an artificial selection experiment for increased voluntary wheel-running activity in house mice (Mus domesticus). Here, we compare body masses of mice from control and selected lines after 14 generations of selection. In both groups, beginning at weaning and then for 8 weeks, we housed half of the individuals with access to running wheels that were free to rotate and the other half with wheels that were locked to prevent rotation. Mice from selected lines were more active than controls at weaning (21 days) and across the experiment (total revolutions during last week: females 2.5-fold higher, males 2.1-fold higher). At weaning, mice from selected and control lines did not differ significantly in body mass. At 79 days of age, mice from selected lines weighed 13.6 % less than mice from control lines, whereas mice with access to free wheels weighed 4.5 % less than 'sedentary' individuals; both effects were statistically significant and additive. Within the free-wheel-access group, individual variation in body mass of males was negatively correlated with amount of wheel-running during the last week (P<0.01); for females, the relationship was also negative but not statistically significant (P>0.40). The narrow-sense genetic correlation between wheel-running and body mass after 8 weeks of wheel access was estimated to be -0. 50. A negative genetic correlation could account for the negative relationship between voluntary wheel-running and body mass that has been reported across 13 species of muroid rodents.  (+info)

The relationship between anxiety and depression in animal models: a study using the forced swimming test and elevated plus-maze. (71/4418)

The present study evaluated the correlation between the behavior of mice in the forced swimming test (FST) and in the elevated plus-maze (PM). The effect of the order of the experiments, i.e., the influence of the first test (FST or PM) on mouse behavior in the second test (PM or FST, respectively) was compared to handled animals (HAND). The execution of FST one week before the plus-maze (FST-PM, N = 10), in comparison to mice that were only handled (HAND-PM, N = 10) in week 1, decreased % open entries (HAND-PM: 33.6 +/- 2.9; FST-PM: 20.0 +/- 3.9; mean +/- SEM; P<0.02) and % open time (HAND-PM: 18.9 +/- 3.3; FST-PM: 9.0 +/- 1.9; P<0.03), suggesting an anxiogenic effect. No significant effect was seen in the number of closed arm entries (FST-PM: 9.5 (7.0-11.0); HAND-PM: 10.0 (4.0-14.5), median (interquartile range); U = 46.5; P>0.10). A prior test in the plus-maze (PM-FST) did not change % immobility time in the FST when compared to the HAND-FST group (HAND-FST: 57.7 +/- 3.9; PM-FST: 65.7 +/- 3.2; mean +/- SEM; P>0.10). Since these data suggest that there is an order effect, the correlation was evaluated separately with each test sequence: FST-PM (N = 20) and PM-FST (N = 18). There was no significant correlation between % immobility time in the FST and plus-maze indexes (% time and entries in open arms) in any test sequence (r: -0.07 to 0.18). These data suggest that mouse behavior in the elevated plus-maze is not related to behavior in the forced swimming test and that a forced swimming test before the plus-maze has an anxiogenic effect even after a one-week interval.  (+info)

Lactate transport activity in rat skeletal muscle sarcolemmal vesicles after acute exhaustive exercise. (72/4418)

The effect of a single bout of exhaustive exercise on muscle lactate transport capacity was studied in rat skeletal muscle sarcolemmal (SL) vesicles. Rats were assigned to a control (C) group (n = 14) or an acutely exercised (E) group (n = 20). Exercise consisted of treadmill running (25 m/min, 10% grade) to exhaustion. SL vesicles purified from C and E rats were sealed because of sensitivity to osmotic forces. The time course of 1 mM lactate uptake in zero-trans conditions showed that the equilibrium level in the E group was significantly lower than in the C group (P < 0.05). The initial rate of 1 mM lactate uptake decreased significantly from 2.44 +/- 0.22 to 1.03 +/- 0.08 nmol. min(-1). mg protein(-1) (P < 0.05) after exercise, whereas that of 50 mM lactate uptake did not differ significantly between the two groups. For 100 mM external lactate concentration ([lactate]), exhaustive exercise increased initial rates of lactate uptake (219.6 +/- 36.3 to 465.4 +/- 80.2 nmol. min(-1). mg protein(-1), P < 0.05). Although saturation kinetics were observed in the C group with a maximal transport velocity of 233 nmol. min(-1). mg protein(-1) and a Michealis-Menten constant of 24.5 mM, saturation properties were not seen after exhaustive exercise in the E group, because initial rates of lactate uptake increased linearly with external [lactate]. We conclude that a single bout of exhaustive exercise significantly modified SL lactate transport activity, resulting in a decrease in 1 mM lactate uptake and was associated with alterations in the saturable properties at [lactate] above 50 mM. These results suggest that changes in sarcolemmal lactate transport activity may alter lactate and proton exchanges after exhaustive exercise.  (+info)