Aims/hypothesis In early type 1 diabetes mellitus, renal salt handling is dysregulated, so that the glomerular filtration rate becomes inversely proportional to salt intake. The salt paradox occurs in both humans and rats and, with low salt intake, results in diabetic hyperfiltration. We tested whether increased salt intake could reduce the susceptibility to injury of non-clipped kidneys in diabetic rats with pre-existing Goldblatt hypertension. Methods Male Long-Evans rats were made hypertensive and half were then made diabetic. Blood glucose was maintained at ∼20-25 mmol/l by insulin implants. One half of each received only the salt in normal chow (1% by weight) and the other half received added salt in drinking water to equal 2.7% by weight of food intake. Weekly 24 h blood pressure records were acquired by telemetry during the 4-month experiment. Results Systolic blood pressure was not affected by diabetes or increased salt intake, alone or together. Autoregulation was highly efficient in the non-clipped kidney of both intact and diabetic rats. Histological examination showed minor injury in the clipped kidney, which did not differ among groups. The non-clipped kidney showed extensive pressuredependent glomerular and vascular injury in both intact and diabetic rats. Conclusions/interpretation The relationship between pressure and injury was shifted toward lower blood pressure in diabetic rats, indicating that diabetes increased the susceptibility of the kidney to injury despite preservation of autoregulation. The increased susceptibility was not affected by high salt intake in the diabetic rats, thus disproving the hypothesis.
There is no accepted standard for measuring mobility in hospitalized patients with an acute exacerbation of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (AECOPD). The objective of this study was to assess convergent, discriminant, and known-group validity and floor/ceiling effects of the de Morton Mobility Index (DEMMI) in hospitalized patients with AECOPD. Individuals with AECOPD ( n = 22) admitted to an acute care hospital medical ward were recruited. Data on the DEMMI, gait speed, daytime energy expenditure, step counts, 6-minute walk distance (6MWD), dyspnea, respiratory and heart rates, quality of life, and oxygen supplementation were collected on day 3 of admission. The DEMMI demonstrated convergent validity with the 6MWD and gait velocity measures (Spearman’s ρ 0.69 and 0.61, respectively; p < 0.003) but not with measures of physical activity or respiratory impairment. Discriminant validity was present, with no correlation between the DEMMI and quality of life and resting heart rate. Known-group validity (gait aids vs. no gait aids) was demonstrated ( p = 0.009). There was no floor effect but there was evidence of a possible ceiling effect (14% of participants received a perfect score). The DEMMI is feasible and showed moderate to strong validity with measures of observed physical function in hospitalized patients with AECOPD.
The HRV measurements showed overall moderate-to-substantial reliability during spontaneous breathing in COPD population. Our findings support the use of HRV parameters for diagnosis and cardiac risk assessment, but only mean heart rate can be used reliably for monitoring changes in autonomic status following rehabilitation intervention in this population.
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