Remote Preconditioning Improves Maximal Performance in Highly Trained Athletes

2011 ◽  
Vol 43 (7) ◽  
pp. 1280-1286 ◽  
Author(s):  
EMILIE JEAN-ST-MICHEL ◽  
CEDRIC MANLHIOT ◽  
JING LI ◽  
MICHAEL TROPAK ◽  
MARIE M. MICHELSEN ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Hana Baklouti ◽  
Asma Aloui ◽  
Davide Malatesta ◽  
Souad Baklouti ◽  
Nizar Souissi ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Christos Voucharas ◽  
Antigoni Lazou ◽  
Filippos Triposkiadis ◽  
Nikolaos Tsilimingas

2000 ◽  
Vol 278 (5) ◽  
pp. H1571-H1576 ◽  
Author(s):  
Regien G. Schoemaker ◽  
Caroline L. van Heijningen

Preconditioning the heart by brief coronary (CAO) or mesenteric artery occlusion (MAO) can protect against damage during subsequent prolonged CAO and reperfusion. The role of bradykinin (BK) in remote cardiac preconditioning by MAO is investigated by antagonizing the BK B2 receptor [Hoechst 140 (HOE-140)] or simulating local BK release by mesenteric intra-arterial infusion. Anesthetized male Wistar rats ( n = 6–8) were treated with HOE-140 or saline before starting the preconditioning protocol, CAO, MAO, or non-preconditioned control. Infarct size related to risk area [ratio of infarct area to area at risk (IA/AR)] was determined after 3 h of reperfusion following a 60-min CAO. IA/AR was 62 ± 5% in controls and not affected by HOE-140 (58 ± 6%). CAO as well as MAO significantly protected the heart (IA/AR, 37 ± 3 and 35 ± 5%), which was prevented by HOE-140 (IA/AR, 71 ± 6 and 65 ± 7%, respectively). Brief intramesenteric BK infusion mimicked MAO (IA/AR, 26 ± 3%). Pretreatment with hexamethonium could abolish this protection (IA/AR, 67 ± 4%). These data indicate an important role for BK in remote preconditioning by MAO. Results support the hypothesis that remote preconditioning acts through sensory nerve stimulation in the ischemic organ.


2018 ◽  
Vol 285 (1890) ◽  
pp. 20181775 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jesper G. Sørensen ◽  
Craig R. White ◽  
Grant A. Duffy ◽  
Steven L. Chown

For over a century, the hypothesis of temperature compensation, the maintenance of similar biological rates in species from different thermal environments, has remained controversial. An alternative idea, that fitness is greater at higher temperatures (the thermodynamic effect), has gained increasing traction. This alternative hypothesis is also being used to understand large-scale biodiversity responses to environmental change. Yet evidence in favour of each of these contrasting hypotheses continues to emerge. In consequence, the fundamental nature of organismal thermal responses and its implications remain unresolved. Here, we investigate these ideas explicitly using a global dataset of 619 observations of four categories of organismal performance, spanning 14 phyla and 403 species. In agreement with both hypotheses, we show a positive relationship between the temperature of maximal performance rate ( T opt ) and environmental temperature ( T env ) for developmental rate and locomotion speed, but not growth or photosynthesis rate. Next, we demonstrate that relationships between T env and the maximal performance rate ( U max ) are rarely significant and positive, as expected if a thermodynamic effect predominates. By contrast, a positive relationship between T opt and U max is always present, but markedly weaker than theoretically predicted. These outcomes demonstrate that while some form of thermodynamic effect exists, ample scope is present for biochemical and physiological adaptation to thermal environments in the form of temperature compensation.


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