BackgroundDietary nitrate supplementation has been shown to decrease the oxygen cost of exercise and prolong exercise tolerance, as measured by sub-maximal exercise endurance distance and time at 85% V̇O2max, in both elite athletes and normal healthy subjects. Patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) have reduced quality of life and ability to perform activities of daily living attributable to diminished exercise tolerance, and dietary nitrate may be able to ameliorate this.MethodsWe performed a double-blind, computer-randomized placebo control crossover trial at a tertiary Australian hospital to investigate whether dietary nitrate supplementation as beetroot juice (BR) would augment submaximal exercise endurance in individuals with spirometrically confirmed stable moderate COPD. Volunteers underwent an incremental shuttle walk test to determine V̇O2max followed by a test dose of BR to establish safety in the study population. Participants performed an endurance shuttle walk test (ESWT) at 85% V̇O2max after randomization to either a 3 day wash-in of BR (4.8 mmol twice a day) or placebo (nitrate deplete BR), with a final dose on the morning of testing. They then crossed over after 4 day washout. Repeated measures two sided paired t-tests were employed.Results35 participants were recruited with 19 completing the trial. In the initial safety phase, we measured systolic blood pressure over four hours post first dose of BR, and found a mean 10 mmHg decrement maximal at 1 hour. One individual developed symptomatic postural hypotension and was excluded. The primary outcomes of ESWT distance and time to fatigue improved by 11% and 6% respectively; however these differences did not achieve statistical significance (p = 0.494 and 0.693 respectively).ConclusionsOur study does not support a role for routine dietary nitrate supplementation for enhancement of exercise endurance in COPD.Trial registrationAustralia and New Zealand Clinical Trial Register: ACTRN12611001088932Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12890-015-0057-4) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.
Nineteen patients with angina were recruited in this study for comparison of two 1-day protocols (stress-4h rest and rest-4-h stress) and a 2-day protocol of technetium-99m tetrofosmin single-photon emission tomography (SPET). All of them underwent coronary angiography before or after the study. Exercise stress-rest study and rest-stress study were performed on two consecutive days. Delayed imaging was performed before the rest injection on the 2nd day. The stress study on the 1st day and rest study on the 2nd day were considered as a 2-day protocol. The 1-day stress-rest protocol had a sensitivity of 100% (18/18) and an accuracy of 100% (19/19) in diagnosing ischaemic heart disease. The 1-day rest-stress protocol had a sensitivity of 94.4% (17/18) and an accuracy of 94.7% (18/19). These differences were not statistically significant (P=0.5 for sensitivity and accuracy). There was also no statistically significant difference between the two protocols in the diagnosis of ischaemic heart disease in individual artery territories. For the left descending artery, sensitivity was 88.2% (15/17) vs 76.5% (13/17) (P=0.48) for the stress-rest and rest-stress studies respectively. For the left circumflex artery, sensitivity was 90% (9/10) vs 80% (8/10) (P=1) and specificity was 66.7% (6/9) vs 77.8% (7/9) (P=1) respectively. For the right coronary artery, the sensitivity was 100% (16/16) vs 94% (15/16) (P=1) respectively, while the specificity was 33.3% (1/3) in both studies. Three hundred and forty-two myocardial segments were analysed. The stress-rest and 2-day protocols showed no statistically significant difference in the overall identification of segments with reversible ischaemia (48/141 segments vs 48/141 segments) or in respect of individual artery territories. There was also no significant difference in the identification of reversible ischaemic segments between the rest-stress and 2-day protocols (48/141 segments vs 34/135 segments, P=0.14). Abdominal activity was seen in 36 studies and interpretation was affected in five of them. Five patients with 24-h delayed images were evaluated and 24 segments with washout were identified. It is concluded that 99mTc-tetrofosmin is a valuable new tracer in the investigation of ischaemic heart disease. The 1-day stress-rest protocol is as good as the 1-day rest-stress protocol in diagnosing coronary heart disease. The 1-day protocols and the 2-day protocol display no difference in identifying segments with reversible ischaemia.
A series of studies has reported weight gain in association with COVID‐19 lockdowns; typically, this research has had short‐term follow‐up in populations that tended to gain weight. In this study, the effect of prolonged lockdowns on weight was assessed in a population of patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Before lockdown subjects gained an average of 0.022 kg per month; after lockdown this trend reversed with subjects losing weight at 0.032 kg per month, a trend that was highly significant (P < 0.001).
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