Neutrophils play an important role in the immune system, forming the "first line of defence" against invading microorganisms and there are few data available concerning neutrophil functions in relation to exercise. We investigated in 7 basketball professional players possible changes before, during and after the sports season, in some haematological parameters and in several aspects of the phagocytic process of neutrophils, such as adhesion, superoxide anion release and bactericidal activity. Training and competitions produced a significant rise in the number of total leukocytes and differential counts, but the values returned to the pre-start levels 3 weeks after the end of the championship. The bactericidal activity and the superoxide anion released were significantly greater during the sports season, while the percentage of cellular adhesion significantly decreased during the championship; after the sports season the values returned to the control levels. As in the literature data concerning neutrophil functions in relation to exercise are non-convergent, it is important in our opinion, to understand whether the alterations induced by exercise can persist after repeated stimuli.
30-year data are presented on blood pressure and cardiovascular morbidity and mortality for 144 nuns living in a secluded order in six nunnerlie in Umbria, central Italy and 138 lay women from the same region. There were no significant differences at baseline regarding age, blood pressure, body mass index, race, ethnic background, menarche, family history of hypertension or 24-hour urinary sodium excretion. None of the women were smokers and none took birth control pills nor did they use estrogen replacement therapy. During the observation period blood pressure remained remarkably stable among the nuns. None showed a rise in diastolic blood pressure to above 90 mm Hg. On the contrary the lay women showed the expected rise in blood pressure with age. This resulted in a gradually greater difference (delta > 30/15 mm Hg) in blood pressure between the two groups, which was statistically significant. There were 31 fatal and 69 non-fatal cardiovascular events during the 30 years of follow-up. These were significantly more common in the lay women, 10 vs. 21 fatal and 21 vs. 48 non-fatal in the nuns and lay women respectively. It appears reasonable to assume that the difference in psychosocial stress is the main underlying factor for the observed findings.
In this study we examined breath volatile hydrocarbon concentrations in exhaled air of hemodialysis patients. We assessed both C2–C5 alkanes – among them ethane and pentane the production of which in man is essentially due to the action free radicals exert on polyunsaturated fatty acids – and isoprene, an unsaturated hydrocarbon the biosynthesis and biological effects of which are the subject of controversy and mounting interest. Twenty patients were studied. Evaluation was performed intrapatient in the breath of patients with chronic renal failure, before and after dialysis (20 patients) and, in the same cases, during hemodialytic treatment (10 patients). Breath concentrations of these volatile hydrocarbons, determined before dialysis, were not different from those of normal subjects. Dialysis did not modify the levels of the C2–C5 saturated hydrocarbons ethane, propane, butane and pentane. Instead, there was a marked increase in isoprene in all patients (basal values rose by a mean of 270%). Since isoprene was not present in the fluids or filters used for dialysis and there were only traces in the ambient air, the isoprene must have been produced endogenously during hemodialysis. As no situation has previously been reported to increase endogenous production of isoprene in humans, patients in hemodialysis offer a unique opportunity to investigate in depth the medical, biological and toxicological aspects of isoprene.
Recent findings of increased isoprene emission in the exhaled breath of patients undergoing haemodialysis and experimental evidence of the potential toxic and cancerogenic effects of isoprene hydrocarbon led us to assess how long haemodialysis patients are exposed to how much isoprene after a single haemodialysis session. Patients with end-stage renal failure on regular 4-hour (from 08.00 to 12.00 h) maintenance haemodialysis three times weekly were monitored. The breath isoprene content was analyzed by gas chromatography. Intrapatient evaluations were performed by collecting samples before, during, and immediately after the haemodialysis session, during the following hours, and on the following nondialysis day. The breath isoprene content increased in all patients. Isoprene overproduction showing a biphasic pattern was first detected soon after the dialysis session ended. These data show that haemodialyzed patients seem to be consistently exposed to high endogenous isoprene concentrations. The mechanisms and implications of this endogenous isoprene overproduction need to be elucidated with regard to the mevalonic pathway and in the physiopathological setting of the uraemia-dialysis syndrome.
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