Search results for "Output"

showing 10 items of 381 documents

Effects of three different water temperatures on dehydration in competitive swimmers

2011

Summary Aims The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of three different water temperatures on physiological responses (dehydration, sweat rate, urine output, rectal temperature and plasma electrolytes) of competitive athletes during a “simulated” race of 5 km in an indoor swimming pool. Methods Nine male competitive master swimmers swam 5 km with the water at temperatures of 23, 27 and 32 C. Immediately before (Pre) and after (Post) each trial, samples of blood and urine were collected, body weight was recorded and rectal temperature was measured. The dehydration percentage and sweat rate were the highest at 32 C and the lowest at 23 C (23 C: −0.9 ± 0.5; 27 C: −1.3 ± 0.6; 32 C…

medicine.medical_specialtyFluid balance body temperatures plasma electrolytesSettore BIO/16 - Anatomia UmanaChemistryRectal temperatureUrinemedicine.diseaseBody weightSettore BIO/09 - Fisiologiafluid balancePhysiological responsesSurgeryrectal temperatureSWEATopen water; swimming; sweat rate; fluid balance; performance; rectal temperatureAnimal scienceOpen watersweat rateopen watermedicineOrthopedics and Sports MedicineDehydrationswimmingperformanceUrine outputScience & Sports
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Hemodynamic effects of dobutamine in children with cardiovascular failure.

1982

The effect of dobutamine, a synthetic catecholamine, was studied in 12 patients aged one day to 14 years with low cardiac output syndromes. After initial stabilization of the patients dobutamine was administered by continuous infusion in a dosage of 7.5 or 10 μg/kg/min. Heart rate, cardiac output (using thermodilution technique and/or pulse contour method), mean systemic and mean pulmonary artery pressures were determined before and after the dobutamine infusion. Systemic and pulmonary vascular resistances, cardiac index and stroke volume index were calculated. Cardiac output and cardiac index increased significantly in every patient, whereas the heart rate changed only slightly, suggesting…

medicine.medical_specialtyMean arterial pressureCardiac outputAdolescentCardiac indexHemodynamicsBlood PressurePulmonary ArteryCatecholaminesHeart RateInternal medicinemedicine.arteryDobutamineHeart ratemedicineHumansCardiac OutputChildHeart Failurebusiness.industryHemodynamicsInfant NewbornInfantStroke VolumeStroke volumeAnesthesiaPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthPulmonary arteryCardiologyDobutamineVascular Resistancebusinessmedicine.drugEuropean journal of pediatrics
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Choice of fluids in critically ill patients

2018

Background Fluids are by far the most commonly administered intravenous treatment in patient care. During critical illness, fluids are widely administered to maintain or increase cardiac output, thereby relieving overt tissue hypoperfusion and hypoxia. Main text Until recently, because of their excellent safety profile, fluids were not considered “medications”. However, it is now understood that intravenous fluid should be viewed as drugs. They affect the cardiovascular, renal, gastrointestinal and immune systems. Fluid administration should therefore always be accompanied by careful consideration of the risk/benefit ratio, not only of the additional volume being administered but also of th…

medicine.medical_specialtyResuscitationCritical CareCritical IllnessResuscitationCrystalloidDiseaseReview[SDV.MHEP.PSR]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Pulmonology and respiratory tractlaw.inventionlcsh:RD78.3-87.3Sepsis03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicinelaw[SDV.MHEP.MI]Life Sciences [q-bio]/Human health and pathology/Infectious diseasesAnesthesiologymedicineHumansIntensive care unit030212 general & internal medicineCardiac OutputIntensive care medicineCritically illFluidsRespiratory distressbusiness.industryAcute kidney injury030208 emergency & critical care medicinemedicine.diseaseIntensive care unit3. Good healthAnesthesiology and Pain Medicinelcsh:AnesthesiologyColloidFluid TherapyFluidbusinessAbdominal surgery
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Hemodynamic Monitoring in Patients With Subarachnoid Hemorrhage: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

2020

Aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhage (aSAH) often causes cardiopulmonary dysfunction. Therapeutic strategies can be guided by standard (invasive arterial/central venous pressure measurements, fluid balance assessment), and/or advanced (pulse index continuous cardiac output, pulse dye densitometry, pulmonary artery catheterization) hemodynamic monitoring. We conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis of the literature to determine whether standard compared with advanced hemodynamic monitoring can improve patient management and clinical outcomes after aSAH. A literature search was performed for articles published between January 1, 2000 and January 1, 2019. Studies involving aSAH patients …

medicine.medical_specialtySubarachnoid hemorrhageCentral Venous PressureHemodynamicslaw.inventionBrain Ischemia03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineRandomized controlled trial030202 anesthesiologylawhemodynamicInternal medicinemedicineHumansCardiac Outputbusiness.industryHemodynamic MonitoringCentral venous pressureSubarachnoid Hemorrhagemedicine.diseaseIntensive care unitConfidence intervalmonitoringAnesthesiology and Pain Medicineblood volumeRelative riskMeta-analysisCardiologySurgeryNeurology (clinical)aneurysmal subarachnoid hemorrhagebusiness030217 neurology & neurosurgery
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Comparing Active, Passive, and Combined Warm-Ups Among Junior Alpine Skiers in −7°C

2020

Context: Warming up in very cold climates and maintaining an elevated body temperature prior to a race is challenging for snow-sport athletes. Purpose: To investigate the effects of active (ACT), passive (PAS), and a combination of ACT and PAS (COM) warm-ups on maximal physical performance in a subzero environment among snow-sport athletes. Methods: Ten junior alpine skiers completed 3 experimental trials in −7.2 (0.2)°C. The ACT involved 5 minutes of moderate cycling, 3 × 15-second accelerations, a 6-second sprint, 5 countermovement jumps (CMJs), and a 10-minute passive transition phase, while in PAS, participants wore a lower-body heated garment for 24 minutes. In COM, participants comple…

medicine.medical_specialtyWarm-Up Exercisebiologybusiness.industryAthletesCold climatePhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationContext (language use)biology.organism_classificationActive passiveBicyclingSprintAthletesPhysical therapyHumansMedicineOrthopedics and Sports MedicinePower outputMuscle SkeletalbusinessCyclingWarming upSportsInternational Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance
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LONGITUDINAL TRACKING OF MUSCULAR POWER CHANGES OF NCAA DIVISION I COLLEGIATE WOMEN GYMNASTS

2004

Gymnastics relies upon power as a critical component of sports-specific fitness. The purpose of this study was to monitor long-term training adaptations in the power of National Collegiate Athletics Association Division I women gymnasts. Twenty members of a women's gymnastic team (aged 18-22) were tracked over 3 years with the first year a baseline year of testing. Whole body power for the counter-movement (CMJ) and squat (SJ) vertical jump was obtained via force plate analyses at 2 assessment time points during each year (February and November). Results showed significant (p < or = 0.05) and continued increases in peak power output in the CMJ and SJ at each biannual assessment. Improvement…

medicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industryPeak power outputSquatPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationGeneral MedicineMuscular powerMuscle massVertical jumpFat free massPhysical therapymedicineTime to peakOrthopedics and Sports MedicineExercise physiologybusinessJournal of Strength and Conditioning Research
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Unilateral Conditioning Contractions Enhance Power Output in Elite Short Track Speed Skaters

2018

AbstractThe objective of the present study was to assess the effect of unilateral lower-body-conditioning muscle contractions during multiple sets of fatiguing repeated jumps in elite athletes. Five elite short-track speed-skating athletes performed 9 sets of 6 maximal consecutive jumps on 2 separate occasions: with (COND) and without (CTRL) preliminary voluntary conditioning contractions (CC) 5 min before the beginning of the sets. The CC consisted of 2 consecutive 3 s maximal unilateral isometric squats against a fixed bar, resulting in a 6 s overall isometric contraction per leg. For each set, power output (PO) was measured using a linear position transducer and averaged over the 6 corre…

medicine.medical_specialtyexercisepost activation potentiationTraining & TestingIsometric exercisepowerInternal medicinemedicineCardiologyPost activation potentiationConditioningElite athletesfatiguePower outputMathematicsSports Medicine International Open
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Neuromuscular function during prolonged pedalling exercise at different cadences

2005

Aim: The purpose of the present work was to assess the strategies set by the central nervous system in order to provide the power output required throughout a prolonged (1-h) pedalling exercise performed at different cadences (50 rpm, 110 rpm and the freely chosen cadence). Methods: Neuromuscular (NM) activity of vastus lateralis, rectus femoris, biceps femoris and gastrocnemius lateralis muscles was studied quantitatively [root-mean square (RMS) and mean power frequency (MPF)] and qualitatively (timing of onset and offset of muscle bursts during crank cycle). Results: The present results showed that increased cadence resulted in earlier muscle activation in crank cycle. The influence of ca…

medicine.medical_specialtymedicine.diagnostic_testPhysiologybusiness.industryMuscle activationPhysical exerciseElectromyographyBicepsTonic (physiology)ElectrophysiologyPhysical medicine and rehabilitationPhysical therapyMedicinePower outputbusinessCadencehuman activitiesActa Physiologica Scandinavica
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An Emulator Toolbox to Approximate Radiative Transfer Models with Statistical Learning

2015

Physically-based radiative transfer models (RTMs) help in understanding the processes occurring on the Earth’s surface and their interactions with vegetation and atmosphere. When it comes to studying vegetation properties, RTMs allows us to study light interception by plant canopies and are used in the retrieval of biophysical variables through model inversion. However, advanced RTMs can take a long computational time, which makes them unfeasible in many real applications. To overcome this problem, it has been proposed to substitute RTMs through so-called emulators. Emulators are statistical models that approximate the functioning of RTMs. Emulators are advantageous in real practice because…

multi-outputComputer scienceradiative transfer modelsScienceExtrapolationemulatorMachine learningcomputer.software_genreemulator; machine learning; radiative transfer models; multi-output; ARTMO; GUI toolbox; FLEX; fluorescenceAtmosphereARTMOPartial least squares regressionRadiative transferMATLABcomputer.programming_languageArtificial neural networkbusiness.industryQStatistical modelVegetationToolboxFLEXmachine learningPrincipal component analysisGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesfluorescenceArtificial intelligencebusinessAlgorithmcomputerGUI toolboxRemote Sensing
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High Output Heart Failure in Multiple Myeloma: Pathogenetic Considerations.

2022

The high output heart failure is a clinical condition in which the systemic congestion is associated to a high output state, and it can be observed in a non-negligible percentage of hematological diseases, particularly in multiple myeloma, a condition in which the risk of adverse cardiovascular events may increase, with a worse prognosis for patients. For this reason, though an accurate literature search, we provided in this review a complete overview of different pathogenetic mechanisms responsible for high output heart failure in multiple myeloma. Indeed, this clinical finding is present in the 8% of multiple myeloma patients, and it may be caused by artero-venous shunts, enhanced angioge…

multiple myelomaangiogenesisCancer ResearchOncologyhyperammonemiahigh output heart failureNeoplasms. Tumors. Oncology. Including cancer and carcinogensangiogenesiglutamminolysiplasma viscosityglutamminolysisRC254-282artero-venous fistulaeCancers
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