31P NMR is used to determine the relationship between work output in the exercising human forearm and the steady-state capability of oxidative phosphorylation as measured by the phosphocreatine/inorganic phosphate, ratio (PCr/Pi). Exercise intensities (one contraction per 5 sec) permitting comfortable continuation of activity for >1 hr produced PCr/Pi of about 1 for a subject ofmoderate training. Linear relationships between work rate per unit volume of muscle and the 5-min mean'PCr/ P. were found for the subject's left and right arms. The protocol affords sensitive criteria ofmuscle performance innormal subjects and of biochemical or vascular disease in abnormal subjects. The Pi, PCr, and ATP levels found by' 31P NMR represent the initial values in the cycle ofcontraction and relaxation which permit restitution of resting state 4 priorto the next contraction and the continuation of steady-state work performance.Regulation of the bioenergetic state of body tissues bt mitochondrial respiratory control (1) is exemplified in skeletal muscle by the state 4-3 response of tissue mitochondria in the oxidation of the matrix space NADH (2) and of cytochrome b (3, 4) of the frog gastrocnemius muscle in response to electrically induced contractions. Activation ofenergy metabolism has been attributed to the arrival of ADP at mitochondria or, as more recently suggested by 31P NMR studies, to the fact that increased levels of free Pi elicit the resting -* active (state transition in the tissue mitochondria (5-9). In either case, one would expect the state 4-3 transition of mitochondria to regulate the rate of ATP synthesis as the work load is increased in a linear fashion up to the point of maximum state 3 electron transport, respiration rate, and ATP production.The noninvasive 31P NMR determination of tissue Pi concentration is extended in detail to the human arm and leg in these studies and supports the earlier finding oflow Pi in resting tissue (6-9, *), confirming initial studies (10) of phosphate potential in suspensions of ascites tumor cells in which a value of 104 was found by a noninvasive optical measurement and differed by a factor of>85 from the chemical datawhich gave 103.2.Much work has been done with paired samples ofamphibian muscle by both analytical biochemistry (11) and by 31P NMR (12). In humans, however, continual biopsy and biochemical analysis are not practical because even needle biopsies cause a loss of functional muscle. The object of the present experiments was to maintain steady states ofwrist flexor work output and to determine the corresponding stimulation of mitochondrial activity by measuring the phosphocreatine (PCr)/Pi ratio in a noninvasive, nondestructive manner.The first noninvasive human studies with 31P NMR permitted only mild exercise of an extremity within the magnet (6).These studies evaluated PCr/Pi values during continuous exercise of the human wrist flexor musculature, monitored by direct coupling to the Cybex ergometer. In two other recent applications to arm exercise wi...
Twenty-one joints with stable (n = 9) or loose (n = 12) osteochondritis dissecans (OCD) lesions were examined in 15 subjects with plain radiography, three-phase bone scintigraphy, and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging. The lesion size and the thickness of the sclerotic margin as measured on plain radiographs were good parameters for predicting loosening. However, bone scintigraphy was more sensitive and specific in determining the mechanical stability of OCD lesions. MR imaging permitted direct visualization of loosening and fragment displacement; the latter permits differentiation of in situ loosening from a grossly unstable lesion. The noninvasive nature of bone scintigraphy and MR imaging makes them potentially preferable diagnostic modalities to arthrography for evaluating the mechanical status of OCD lesions.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.