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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Diabetes mellitus ; Myelin ; Peripheral nerve ; Polyradiculoneuropathy
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary A diabetic woman underwent an incision of the right big toe for an abscess and developed a typical Guillain-Barré syndrome 48 h later. A biopsy of a peripheral nerve, performed 10 days later, showed modifications usually seen in diabetic patients, as well as the characteristic ultrastructural modifications of the Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS). Moreover, 22% of myelinated fibers exhibited vesicular disruption of the myelin sheaths. This lesion is rarely encountered on the biopsies of peripheral nerve in GBS and concerns only a few myelinated fibers. Such a prominence of myelinic vesicular disruption and its occurrence in a diabetic patient are discussed.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Amsterdam : Elsevier
    Respiration Physiology 83 (1991), S. 143-153 
    ISSN: 0034-5687
    Keywords: Animal, man ; Diffusing capacity, pulmonary, for CO, for NO ; Exercise, and pulmonary diffusing capacity
    Source: Elsevier Journal Backfiles on ScienceDirect 1907 - 2002
    Topics: Medicine
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Meteorology and atmospheric physics 17 (1968), S. 172-185 
    ISSN: 1436-5065
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geography , Physics
    Description / Table of Contents: Summary Based on a statistical analysis of wind speed measurements up to a height of 250 m the author determines the influences of height, averaging time (between 10 and 60 minutes) and thermal stratification on the frequency distribution of wind speed. The shifting of the cumulative frequencies to higher wind speeds with increasing heights can be described by a potential law, the exponent of which depends on the thermal stratification. The influence of the averaging time may be neglected as it is but small.
    Abstract: Résumé Il est possible de déterminer l'influence de la hauteur, de la durée sur laquelle est calculée la moyenne (entre 10 et 60 minutes) et de la stratification thermique sur la répartition des fréquences de la vitesse du vent en partant d'une analyse statistique de mesures de cette vitesse elle-même effectuée jusqu'à 250 m de hauteur. Le décalage des fréquences vers de plus grandes vitesses du vent avec la hauteur peut s'énoncer par une fonction exponentielle dans laquelle l'exposant de la puissance dépend de la stratification thermique. L'influence de la durée sur laquelle la moyenne est calculée est tellement faible qu'elle peut être négligée.
    Notes: Zusammenfassung Aufgrund einer statistischen Analyse von Windgeschwin-digkeitsmessungen bis 250 m Höhe ist es möglich, den Einfluß der Höhe, der Mittelbildungszeit (zwischen 10 und 60 Minuten) und der thermischen Schichtung auf die Häufigkeitsverteilung der Windgeschwindigkeit zu bestimmen. Die Verschiebung der Summenhäufigkeiten zu höheren Windgeschwindigkeiten mit zunehmender Höhe läßt sich durch einen Potenzansatz beschreiben, wobei der Exponent von der thermischen Schichtung abhängt. Der Einfluß der Mittelbildungszeit ist vernachlässigbar klein.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 4
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Pflügers Archiv 403 (1985), S. 384-387 
    ISSN: 1432-2013
    Keywords: Inert gases ; Dead space ; Ventilation/perfusion ratio
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract In ten normal subjects, series dead space was determined for six intravenously infused inert gases (SF6, ethane, cyclopropane, fluothane, ether, acetone) from their expired and alveolar concentrations. The method for sampling alveolar gas was based on the criterion of identity of mean alveolar and expired gas exchange ratios. Inert gases were analysed chromatographically. Acetone, the most soluble gas, yielded the lowest dead space, the difference to the other gases being about 4.5%. This is probably due to the non-infinite value of the series dead space ventilation-perfusion ratio (A/Q) which was estimated at about 2,000. The diffusivity, inversely related to the molecular weight, also played a role, the heaviest gas (fluothane) having a greater dead space than the lightest (ethane). The underestimation of the dead space from acetone is expected to be greater in subjects with low tidal volume and high bronchial blood flow, i. e. in some patients with respiratory disease.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    European journal of applied physiology 75 (1997), S. 343-350 
    ISSN: 1439-6327
    Keywords: Key words Exercise immediate recovery  ;  Endurance training  ;  Adrenocorticotropic hormone  ;  Cortisol feedback
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract The hypothalamo-pituitary-adrenal axis is involved throughout the exercise-recovery cycle. Nevertheless, differences in hormone responses during early recovery between sedentary and endurance trained subjects are not well known. The aim of this preliminary study was to monitor plasma cortisol and adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) concentrations both during and after the end of running exercise performed by four endurance trained adults (marathon men) compared to four sedentary subjects. Two parameters, i.e. intensity and duration, were changed on 4 consecutive days. The 1st day (D0) was spent in the laboratory: all blood samples were obtained at rest to determine diurnal variations of each hormone. On the following days (D1–D4) the subjects exercised: D1 and D2 brief (20 min), light (50% maximal heart rate HRmax, D1) or strenuous (80% HRmax, D2), D3 and D4 prolonged (120 min), light (D3) or strenuous (D4). In both groups, neither brief (D1, D2) nor prolonged light exercise (D3) induced any significant variation in plasma ACTH or cortisol concentrations. Plasma ACTH and cortisol concentrations increased only if the exercise was intense and prolonged (D4). The training factor did not modify the intensity or duration thresholds for the activation of the pituitary-adrenocortical response to exercise in the conditions of our experiment. However, during immediate recovery from the four exercise regimens, the plasma ACTH concentrations of the marathon men were constantly above the values of the sedentary subjects, although plasma cortisol concentration remained similar in both groups. As an indirect means of evaluating the relationships between ACTH and cortisol we compared the areas under the cortisol and ACTH curves (AUC) from 0.5 to 3.5h during recovery from D1 to D4 compared to D0 at the same time. Cortisol AUC were similar in the sedentary subjects and marathon men although the ACTH AUC were different in the sedentary subjects and marathon men, suggesting a change in the pituitary-adrenal relationship at some yet indeterminate level. During the immediate recovery from exercise whatever its intensity, the magnitude of the ACTH response was increased in the trained subjects but with a reduced effect upon its target, the adrenal glands. This phenomenon has not been described in the literature. Two non-exclusive phenomena may be involved, i.e. a decreased adrenal sensitivity to ACTH stimulation, and/or a decreased hypothalamo-pituitary axis sensitivity to cortisol negative feedback.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1439-6327
    Keywords: Plasma testosterone ; Luteinizing hormone ; Exercise ; Recovery ; Endurance training
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract In men, the hypothalamic-pituitary-testicular axis controls the secretion of testosterone which, in this sex, is a major anabolic hormone. Physical exercise modulates testosterone concentration, affecting the whole axis by poorly understood mechanisms. We have reported in this preliminary study the short and longterm effects of exercise on the function of the gonadotropic axis in trained compared to untrained subjects. Environmental factors known to interfere with pituitary function were minimized. Four marathon and four sedentary men, were studied during 5 days successively using different combinations of two factors: duration and intensity of running tests. Day 0 (DO) was a rest day, and the exercises were: D1 and D2 brief (20 min), light (50% maximal heart rate, HRmax, D1) or intense (80% HRmax, D2), D3 and D4 prolonged (120 min) and light (50% HRmax, D3) or intense (80% HRmax, D4). Testosterone (free and total) and luteinizing hormone (LH) concentrations were measured before, during and after exercise. The baseline concentrations of plasma testosterone were lower in the long distance runners than in the sedentary group [41.8 (SEM 5.5) vs 64.5 (SEM 7.9) pmol · 1−1, respectively;P 〈 0.05]. This phenomenon was centrally mediated as LH concentration was apparentlyinappropriately low [3.4 (SEM 0.4) vs 4.3 (SEM 1.0) UI · 1−1;P 〉 0.05]. Light to moderate exercise did not modify testosterone and LH concentrations. Conversely, intense and prolonged exercise increased testosterone concentration [73.2 (SEM 9.0) vs 92 (SEM 11.0) pmol · 1−1 in the long distance runners and sedentary group, respectively;P 〈 0.05] and lowered LH concentrations [2.1 (SEM 0.3) vs 3.4 (SEM 0.3) UI · 1−1 in the long distance runners and sedentary group, respectively;P 〈0.05 compared to DO, at the same time]. In our conditions of exercise, negative feedback of testosterone upon LH persisted, as positive feedback of low testosterone concentrations was apparently lacking (inappropriately low LH concentration with regard to low basal testosterone concentration).
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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