In a study to characterise the chest pain induced by adenosine this agent was given as a bolus into a peripheral vein to six healthy volunteers (five men) aged 30-44. On the first day the maximum tolerable dose was determined in each case. On the second day three doses of adenosine (one third, two thirds, and the full maximum tolerable dose) and three doses of saline were given single blind in randomised order. Thereafter aminophylline 5 mg/kg was given and the procedure repeated in a different randomised order. On the third day between two thirds and the full maximum tolerable dose was given followed by 10 mg dipyridamole intravenously and a second injection of the same dose of adenosine. Heart rate and atrioventricular blocks were recorded by electrocardiography. One minute after each dose of adenosine the chest pain was scored.The maximum tolerable dose of adenosine ranged from 10-6 to 37-1 mg. All subjects experienced uneasy central chest pain provoking anxiety. The pain radiated to the shoulders, ulnar aspect ofthe arms, epigastric area, back, and into the throat. The pain began about 20 seconds after the injection and lasted 10-15 seconds. Increasing the dose of adenosine increased the intensity of the pain. Administration of aminophylline reduced the pain significantly. Second degree heart block was recorded in
Energy-rich phosphagens and myoglobin were determined in leg skeletal muscles of seven, 61- to 80-year-old, apparently healthy male subjects. The study repeated after the participants had been exercising on an ergometer bicycle twice weekly for 6 weeks. Before training, myoglobin and all intramuscular energy-rich phosphagens were within the range recorded for a larger series of subjects of similar age. When re-examined after training the myoglobin level remained the same but creatine decreased significantly and the ratio between phosphocreatine and total creatine increased. A slight but significant rise was also observed for the ATP/ADP ratio. It is concluded that age-related changes of intramuscular phosphagens in elderly subjects in part might be due to physical inactivity.
10 patients undergoing transurethral resection of the prostate using sterile distilled water as an irrigating fluid were studied. The extra- and intracellular distribution of water, the total content of water and electrolytes and the free amino acid concentrations in muscle tissue were determined together with the concentrations of free amino acids in plasma preoperatively, immediately postoperatively and 2 hours postoperatively. The content of water and concentrations of electrolytes in skeletal muscle did not change significantly from the preoperative to the postoperative period with the exception of the potassium concentration, which decreased 2 hours postoperatively. The following free amino acid concentrations in muscle tissue showed significantly decreased values 2 hours postoperatively compared with the preoperative values: taurine, serine, glutamate, proline and leucine. The concentrations of non-essential amino acids in muscle decreased significantly 2 hours postoperatively. This may be interpreted as a dilution effect. An increased concentration of some amino acids in plasma postoperatively may be explained as a haemoconcentration effect due to the use of a postoperative diuretic.
The ability of the human pulmonary vascular bed to synthesize prostaglandins (PGs) in response to cholinergic stimulation was investigated in healthy male volunteers. In all of them, except controls, carbaminoylcholine (CCh) was injected subcutaneously at a dose of 5 micrograms/kg. In 3 subjects [1-14C]-labelled arachidonate was then infused at a constant rate into the right atrium between 10 and 15 min after the administration of the drug and the blood from the subclavian artery was sampled simultaneously. The arterial content of [14C]-labelled metabolites was extracted, separated by thin-layer chromatography and quantified using liquid scintillation spectrometry. In 8 other subjects PGI2-like activity after the administration of CCh was assayed in the arterial blood and in 1 subject in the venous blood, using a technique for continuous measurement of platelet aggregation on blood-superfused collagen strip. The major portion of [14C]-activity in the radiochromatograms migrated in parallel with the 6-keto-PGF1 alpha standard. No early defined peaks corresponding to any of the unlabelled PGs D2, E2 or F2 alpha, appeared, but in one chromatogram a minor radiopeak corresponding to authentic thromboxane B2 was observed. Also in the platelet aggregation experiments, 5-15 min after the administration of CCh, a significant increase in the PGI2-like activity was observed in the arterial as well as in the peripheral venous blood, which effect of the drug was abolished by pretreatment with atropine and acetylsalicylic acid.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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