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Ache Jan Marek - - 2012
Limb movements can be driven by muscle contractions, external forces or intrinsic passive forces. For lightweight limbs like those of insects or small vertebrates, passive forces can be large enough to overcome the effects of gravity and may even generate limb movements in the absence of active muscle contractions. Understanding ...
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Thorpe Robin - - 2011
This study represents the first time that muscle damage, endocrine and immune markers have been measured, together with activity profile, during a competitive soccer match. Seven semi-professional soccer players participated in a competitive league match. Blood and saliva samples were obtained 1-hour prior to kick off and immediately post-match. Global ...
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Konow Nicolai - - 2011
Although chewing has been suggested to be a basal gnathostome trait retained in most major vertebrate lineages, it has not been studied broadly and comparatively across vertebrates. To redress this imbalance, we recorded EMG from muscles powering anteroposterior movement of the hyoid, and dorsoventral movement of the mandibular jaw during ...
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Maestre Rodrigo - - 2011
The muscle composition of a pelagic fish species, Atlantic mackerel (Scomber scombrus), has been studied to find out the relationship with its susceptibility to develop lipid oxidation during chilled storage. For such aim, the initial concentration of the major components (water, total lipids, protein and PUFAs) and minor prooxidant and ...
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Nomura Hirotaka - - 2011
ABSTRACT Uptake and elimination of aflatoxins (AFs) by rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) during a long-term (21 days) dietary exposure were studied to assess contamination by AFs in aquaculture fish fed with AF-containing feed. Uptake factor (UF) of aflatoxin B1 (AFB1) in muscle ranged from 0.40×10-3 to 1.30×10-3. AFB1 concentrations in ...
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Thingnam S K - - 2011
Various methods are used to prevent bronchopleural fistula following anatomical lung resection, as bronchopleural fistula constitutes a life-threatening complication. Pleural flaps are less vascularized, whereas an intercostal muscle flap, although well vascularized, does not offer enough strength for repair. We describe here the use of pleural flaps to strengthen a ...
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Lienbacher Karoline - - 2011
The purpose of this study was to localize the cell bodies of palisade endings that are associated with the myotendinous junctions of the extraocular muscles. Rhesus monkeys received tract-tracer injections (tetramethylrhodamine dextran [TMR-DA] or choleratoxin subunit B [CTB]) into the oculomotor and trochlear nuclei, which contain the motoneurons of extraocular ...
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Bonnard A - - 2011
Ano-rectal trauma is common in motor vehicle accidents involving children. Inadequate initial assessment of the extent of lesions may be life threatening. We describe two cases where children were struck by buses that subsequently rolled over them in the prone position, resulting in ano-rectal and gluteal muscle wrenching. The first ...
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Sarcopenia: current theories and the potential beneficial effect of creatine application strategies.
Candow Darren G - - 2011
Sarcopenia, defined as the age-related loss of muscle mass, subsequently has a negative effect on strength, metabolic rate and functionality leading to a reduced quality of life. With the projected increase in life expectancy, the incidence of muscle loss may rise and further drain the health care system, with greater ...
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Yan Yu-Hui - - 2011
The purpose of this study was to identify if a modified end-to-side repair can achieve equal results of nerve regeneration compared to an end-to-end repair using donor phrenic nerves in repair of the musculocutaneous nerve and also pulmonary protection. Eighteen rats were divided into three groups of six each comparing ...
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Amato Anthony A - - 2011
The secondary α-dystroglycanopathies usually present in infancy as congenital muscular dystrophies but may manifest later in childhood or adult life (limb-girdle muscular dystrophy (LGMD) 2I, LGMD2K, LGMD2M, LGMD2N, and LGMD2O). Patients with telethoninopathy (LGMD2B) may present with mainly proximal or distal lower extremity weakness, and notably the muscle biopsies may ...
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Stracke Jenny - - 2011
The 3Rs - Replacement, Reduction and Refinement - have become increasingly important in designing animal experiments. The Pavlov sling is thought to be a non-invasive method to restrain dogs for examinations. The aim of our study was to investigate whether laboratory Beagle dogs that had been trained to tolerate restraint ...
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Galant Lucas Homercher - - 2011
Liver diseases are responsible for metabolic and cardiorespiratory alterations. The objective of this paper is to correlate the maximal oxygen uptake (VO(2max)) and respiratory muscle strength and evaluating the quality of life in liver transplant candidates. Cross-sectional study consisted of 26 patients with cirrhosis who underwent maximal exercise testing, respiratory ...
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Patel Harnish - - 2011
Sarcopenia, the loss of muscle mass and strength, is associated adversely with disability, morbidity and mortality. Epidemiological findings suggest influences operating across the life course may be important. Our aim was to ascertain the feasibility and acceptability of obtaining muscle tissue from healthy older people in order to ultimately identify ...
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Hardiman Orla - - 2011
Respiratory insufficiency is a frequent feature of ALS and is present in almost all cases at some stage of the illness. It is the commonest cause of death in ALS. FVC is used as important endpoint in many clinical trials, and in decision-making events for patients with ALS, although there ...
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Z'graggen W J - - 2011
To test the hypothesis that muscle fibers are depolarized in patients with critical illness myopathy by measuring velocity recovery cycles (VRCs) of muscle action potentials. VRCs were recorded from brachioradialis muscle by direct muscle stimulation in 10 patients in intensive care with evidence of critical illness myopathy (CIM). Two sets ...
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Araújo T Lucena - - 2010
Studies on quality of life in myotonic dystrophy (MD) are scarce and the relationship between respiratory muscle strength and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) has yet to be determined. The present study aims to investigate respiratory muscle strength and HRQoL and their relationship in MD patients. Twenty-three patients (13 men, ...
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Clausen Torben - - 2010
Human skeletal muscles contain the largest single pool of K+ in the body (2600 mmol, 46 times the total K+ content of the extracellular space). Intense exercise may double arterial plasma K+ in one min. This is because of excitation-induced release of K+ from the working muscle cells via K+ ...
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Overgaard-Steensen Christian - - 2010
Brain edema is suggested to be the principal mechanism underlying the symptoms in acute hyponatremia. Identification of the mechanisms responsible for global and regional cerebral water homeostasis during hyponatremia is, therefore, of utmost importance. To examine the osmotic behavior of different brain regions and muscles, in vivo-determined water content (WC) ...
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Park Jeong Ho - - 2010
Paramyotonia congenita (PC), first described in 1886 by Eulenberg, is characterized by cold and exercise-induced muscle stiffness and intermittent flaccid paresis not necessarily related to cold or myotonia. Several authors segregated a pure form of PC, which has no periodic paralysis, even after cold exposure. The existence of this phenotype ...
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Sindelar Jeffrey J - - 2010
"Natural curing" is accomplished by use of vegetable juice/powder high in naturally occurring nitrates combined with a nitrate reducing starter culture to result in indirectly "cured" products. Since the starter culture used is not water soluble, making "naturally cured" whole muscle jerky with current manufacturing techniques has been found ineffective. ...
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Arzel-H?zode Marianne - - 2010
Muscle channelopathies caused by mutations in the SCN4A gene that encodes the muscle sodium channel are transmitted by autosomal-dominant inheritance. We report herein the first cases of homozygous patients for sodium channel mutations responsible for paramyotonia congenita (I1393T) or hypokalemic periodic paralysis (R1132Q). A parallel was drawn between this unprecedented ...
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Jurkat-Rott Karin - - 2010
Five hereditary sodium channelopathies of skeletal muscle have been identified. Prominent symptoms are either myotonia or weakness caused by an increase or decrease of muscle fiber excitability. The voltage-gated sodium channel NaV1.4, initiator of the muscle action potential, is mutated in all five disorders. Pathogenetically, both loss and gain of ...
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Carocci Alessia - - 2010
New chiral mexiletine analogs were synthesized in their optically active forms and evaluated in vitro as use-dependent blockers of skeletal muscle sodium channels. Tests carried out on sodium currents of single muscle fibers of Rana esculenta demonstrated that all of them exerted a higher use-dependent block than mexiletine. The most ...
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Ahmed Imdad - - 2010
We present a case of fatal rebound hyperkalemia in a patient with thyrotoxic periodic paralysis (TPP) treated with potassium supplementation. Although TPP is a rare hyperthyroidism-related endocrine disorder seen predominantly in men of Asian origin, the diagnosis should be considered in patients of non-Asian origins presenting with hypokalemia, muscle weakness ...
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Gallaher Jill - - 2009
We present a model for the control of the transmembrane potential of mammalian skeletal muscle cell. The model involves active and passive transport of Na(+), K(+), and Cl(-). As we check the model against experimental measurements on murine skeletal muscle cells, we find that the model can account for the ...
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Coutts Christopher A - - 2009
In some cells, the development of voltage-gated channels requires synaptic input, while in others it does not. Here we investigate whether the sodium and potassium currents in the skeletal muscle of zebrafish sofa potato (sop(-/-)) mutants develop normally. Zebrafish sop(-/-) mutants do not express nicotinic acetylcholine receptors at neuromuscular junctions, ...
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Inability of healthy subjects to deposit potassium during hypokinesia and potassium supplementation.
Zorbas Yan G - - 2009
OBJECTIVE: To determine the effect of potassium (K+) supplementation and hypokinesia (HK; diminished movement) on muscle K+ content and K+ loss. METHODS: Studies were conducted on 40 healthy male volunteers during a pre-experimental period of 30 days and an experimental-period of 364 days. Volunteers were equally divided into four groups: ...
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Kagiava Alexia - - 2008
Oxaliplatin is a novel chemotherapeutic agent which is effective against advanced colorectal cancer, but at the same time causes severe neuropathy in the peripheral nerve fibres, affecting mainly the voltage-gated sodium (Na(+)) channels (VGNaCs), according to literature. In this study the effects of oxaliplatin on the peripheral myelinated nerve fibres ...
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Pelka Matthias - - 2008
Sodium hypochlorite is often used as an irrigation solution during routine endodontic treatment. Before recementation of a post-retained crown on the upper left lateral incisor, the root canal was irrigated with sodium hypochlorite. There was no root filling in the root canal, and the apex was open after an earlier ...
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Mert Handan - - 2008
The serum levels of copper, zinc, iron, manganese, nickel, cadmium, cobalt, sodium, potassium, calcium, and magnesium were determined in seven different breeds of dogs: Pointer, Poodle, Setter, Labrador Retriever, Golden Retriever, German Shepherd, and Mallinois. Only slight variations were found among the different breeds, and the results presented in this ...
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Tabbara Khalid F - - 2008
PURPOSE: To report a case of nodular scleritis following alendronate sodium. METHODS: A 54 year-old male was treated with alendronate sodium 70 mg orally once per week. Eight weeks later, he experienced pain and redness of the right eye. Biomicroscopy was performed. RESULTS: Patient was found to have inferonasal nodular ...
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Benziane Boubacar - - 2008
The skeletal muscle sodium pump plays a major role in the removal of K(+) ions from the circulation postprandial, or after a physical activity bout, thereby preventing the development of hyperkalemia and fatigue. Insulin and muscle contractions stimulate Na(+)-K(+)-ATPase activity in skeletal muscle, at least partially via translocation of sodium ...
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Gay Sébastien - - 2008
We report on a patient with a severe, rare neonatal form of non-dystrophic myotonia. The patient presented with facial dysmorphism, muscle hypertrophy, severe constipation, psychomotor delay, and frequent cold-induced episodes of myotonia and muscle weakness leading to severe hypoxia and loss of consciousness. Muscle biopsy was non-specific and electromyography revealed ...
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Cherian Ajith
Myotonic syndromes and periodic paralyses are rare disorders of skeletal muscle characterized mainly by muscle stiffness or episodic attacks of weakness. Familial forms are caused by mutation in genes coding for skeletal muscle voltage ionic channels. Familial periodic paralysis and nondystrophic myotonias are disorders of skeletal muscle excitability caused by ...
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Steiner Jorg M - - 2008
Potassium bromide, phenobarbital, or a combination of both is commonly used in the treatment of canine epilepsy. Several cases of clinical pancreatitis have been reported in dogs after treatment with potassium bromide, but the risk of elevated serum canine pancreatic lipase immunoreactivity concentrations in dogs treated with potassium bromide and/or ...
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Blijham Paul J - - 2008
In this study we investigated a family with paramyotonia (PC) congenita caused by a Gly1306Val mutation in the voltage-gated sodium-channel gene SCN4A. A previous study showed that exposure to cold aggravates the muscle stiffness in patients with this mutation. However, the mechanism behind cold sensitivity and the sodium-channel defect remained ...
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Deogenes Kyrill G - - 2008
BACKGROUND: This study aims at showing the effect of hypokinesia (HK) on sodium (Na+) loss with different muscle Na+ deficiency and different Na+ intake. Muscle Na+ content, plasma Na+ level and Na+ loss with and without Na+ supplementation were measured. METHODS: This study was conducted on 40 healthy male volunteers ...
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Cherian Ajith - - 2008
Myotonic syndromes and periodic paralyses are rare disorders of skeletal muscle characterized mainly by muscle stiffness or episodic attacks of weakness. Familial forms are caused by mutation in genes coding for skeletal muscle voltage ionic channels. Familial periodic paralysis and nondystrophic myotonias are disorders of skeletal muscle excitability caused by ...
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Hennet P - - 2007
Forty female Beagle dogs, aged 12 to 24-months were divided into four groups of ten dogs each. Results showed that increasing kibble diameter by 50.0% was associated with a 42.0% calculus reduction. Coating the kibbles with sodium tripolyphosphate, an anti-calculus agent, further induced a 55.0% calculus reduction. Sodium tripolyphosphate was ...
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Sudo Roberto Takashi - - 2008
Malignant hyperthermia is a pharmacogenetic disease of skeletal muscle in which a life-threatening, hypermetabolic syndrome is induced by exposure of susceptible patients to halogenated general anaesthetics and/or succinylcholine. Dantrolene sodium, the only drug effective for treatment of malignant hyperthermia, has low water solubility that makes its clinical use difficult. The ...
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Clausen T - - 2008
Na(+),K(+)-ATPase situated in the plasma membrane mediates active extrusion of Na(+) and intracellular accumulation of K(+). This transport system the Na(+),K(+)-pump is the major regulator of the transmembrane distribution of Na(+) and K(+), and is itself subject to regulation by a wide variety of factors in skeletal muscles. The excitation ...
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Coppolino Giuseppe - - 2007
Dramatic removal of potassium during hemodialysis sessions can induce changes in the electrical properties of nerve cells or muscle fibers, which may underlie neuromuscular symptoms referred by end-stage renal disease patients. The primary aim of our study was to investigate the effects of acetate-free biofiltration (AFB) on the amplitude of ...
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Tavichakorntrakool Ratree - - 2007
None of previous studies had simultaneously analyzed the K(+), Na(+), Mg(2+), and Ca(2+) contents in human skeletal muscle. We examined extensively and simultaneously the levels of all these cations and examined water content in vastus lateralis and pectoralis major muscles in 30 northeastern Thai men who were apparently healthy but ...
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Bergeron Michael F - - 2007
In contrast to muscle cramps that are brought on by muscle overload or fatigue, exertional heat cramps seem to be prompted by extensive sweating and a significant sweat-induced whole-body sodium deficit. As a result of a consequent contracted interstitial compartment, axon terminals of selected motor neurons can become hyper-excitable and ...
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Rose Uwe - - 2007
A chloride current, I(Cl,H), slowly activating on hyperpolarisation was investigated in Drosophila melanogaster larval muscles using the two-electrode voltage clamp. Sizeable currents were observed after the intracellular chloride concentration ([Cl-]i) had been elevated by diffusion of Cl- from the electrodes. The time course of I(Cl,H) was rather variable and required ...
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Díaz-Manera Jordi - - 2007
BACKGROUND: A 46-year-old woman presented to a local hospital with acute respiratory failure and a 2-year progressive history of fatigue, personality changes, increased sweating, dysphagia with substantial weight loss, dysarthria, and intermittent ptosis and diplopia. Neurological examination showed facial weakness, lingual atrophy and bulbar palsy, which necessitated the use of ...
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Struyk Arie F - - 2007
The heritable muscle disorder hypokalemic periodic paralysis (HypoPP) is characterized by attacks of flaccid weakness, brought on by sustained sarcolemmal depolarization. HypoPP is genetically linked to missense mutations at charged residues in the S4 voltage-sensing segments of either CaV1.1 (the skeletal muscle L-type Ca(2+) channel) or NaV1.4 (the skeletal muscle ...
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Schoser Benedikt G H - - 2007
Muscle sodium-channel disorders cover a spectrum of rare myotonic diseases. In a German family with 17 affected individuals in four generations, we identified a heterozygous missense mutation in exon 24 A1481D (c.4442 C>A) of the voltage-gated sodium channel gene (SCN4A) alpha subunit. Phenotypes of 12 family members were characterized by ...
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Platt Simon - - 2007
A 6-month-old, female Cavalier King Charles spaniel exhibited seizures that were difficult to control with standard anticonvulsants over a 12-month period. The diagnosis of an organic aciduria with excessive excretion of hexanoylglycine was determined when the dog was 20 months old. Recurrent and cluster seizures were eventually controlled with the ...
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