In 131 untrained healthy volunteers, unsteady-state upright bicycle ergometry was carried out by means of computer-assisted on-line ergospirometry. In 11 males and 4 females capillary lactate and blood gas analyses sampled simultaneously at 1-min intervals revealed that it is possible to determine the ‘anaerobic threshold’ (AT) and a ‘threshold of decompen-sated metabolic acidosis’ (TDMA) from the respiratory gas exchange by controlling the ventilation equivalent for oxygen (VEO2 = VE/VO2) and carbon dioxide (VECO2 = VE/VCO2). There is no necessity of invasive measurements. Solely ergospirometrical tests in 66 males and 50 females, aged 20–65 years, showed the expected higher work load levels and VO2 at AT and TDMA in males. There was a significant negative correlation to age. In contrast, there are no differences with regard to sex in AT and TDMA for weight-corrected work rates. In the age group 20–39 years, AT is at about 1 W/kg body weight, TDMA at about 2 W/kg body weight. The larger maximum exercise capacity weight corrected for males (3 W/kg) in comparison to females (2.6 W/kg) was dependent on a greater capability in the range of maximum exertion and not on a different level of AT and TDMA.
In normal subjects, a single episode of hypoglycemia increases beta-adrenergic sensitivity. In diabetic subjects, in contrast, hypoglycemia reduces beta-adrenergic sensitivity. These results provide evidence that in type 1 diabetic patients, some maladaptation of tissue sensitivity to catecholamines contributes to the development of hypoglycemia unawareness. A unifying hypothesis is presented for the pathogenesis of hypoglycemia unawareness in type 1 diabetic patients incorporating the concepts of both a reduced catecholamine response and reduced adrenergic sensitivity
This study investigated the ability of two models to represent glucose kinetics in the basal steady state and during an intravenous glucose tolerance test (IVGTT). Six young nonobese male subjects were studied after an overnight fast. Two bolus injections of [U-13C]glucose were given 150 min apart, the first without and the second together with concomitant injection of unlabeled glucose. [3-3H]glucose was constantly infused throughout the study and served to provide an independent means for evaluation of system responses. A linear time-invariant three-compartmental model and the two-compartment time-variant model proposed by Caumo and Cobelli were used to interpret measured time courses of [U-13C]glucose and to reconstruct endogenous glucose production and glucose removal. The ability of the two models to describe the glucose tracer time course was comparable. Simulation studies showed that the two-compartmental time-variant system better predicted measured [3-3H]glucose concentration profiles than did the three-compartmental time-invariant model. However, endogenous glucose production and the integral of excess glucose removal over basal during the IVGTT derived from the two models were almost identical.
In a retrospective study 80 patients with Hodgkin's disease of stage III B (n = 32) and IV (n = 48) were investigated, who had been treated with a modified MOPP regimen. 28 patients (35%) were previously untreated. A completed remission was reached in 51 patients, a partial remission in 16, and 13 patients failed to respond. 16 patients had died in the observation period. Complete remissions were twice as frequent with 90% in stage III as compared with 45% in stage IV. The group of patients surviving 4 years was 92% in stage III and 62% in stage IV.
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