63 research outputs found

    Adaptation of leaves of Vitis vinifera L. to seasonal drought as affected by leaf age

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    Thermoluminescence (TL) glow curves were recorded from leaves of eight Vitis varieties grown in South-West India, viz. Thompson Seedless, Sonaka, Anab-E-Shahi, Kishmish Chami, Tas-A-Ganesh, Black Monuka, Bangalore Purple and American Dogridge belonging to the Vitis vinifera, V. labrusca and V. champini species. The TL peaks were analysed, using a computer-assisted model based on the general order kinetics theory, to determine thermodynamical parameters such as activation energy, entropy, frequency factor and free energy. It was observed that all six V. vinifera samples showed an entirely different TL pattern consisting of only one prominent and highly narrow peak at around -5 °C (peak II). The prominance oft this peak attributed to S2/S3 Qa· recombination suggests a modification at the plastoquinone electron acceptor sites. On the other band, the remaining two varieties Bangalore Purple and American Dogridge showed broader TL spectra consisting of a higher number of peaks. This basic difference is attributed to the difference in species of the selected varieties. Moreover, the TL recorded from Bangalore Purple resembled the standard TL spectra of spinach. The study undertaken in this paper may be relevant in grape breeding programs

    Comparison of the effects of salmeterol and ipratropium bromide on exercise performance and breathlessness in patients with stable chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

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    AbstractTo compare the effects of salmeterol, an adrenergic drug, and ipratropium bromide, an anticholinergic drug, on breathlessness and gas exchange during exercise in patients with chronic obstructive lung disease (COPD), we performed a progressive treadmill exercise test on 15 patients on 3 days (24 h apart), after inhalation placebo, ipratropium bromide (120 μg) or salmeterol (50 μg) in a randomized fashion. Dyspnoea during exercise was evaluated from the regression slope between Borg scale (BS) scores and distance walked each minute on the treadmill. The regression was expressed as the distance walked at BS score 5, the threshold load of dyspnoea (TLD) and breakpoint load of dyspnoea. During and after the exercise, oxygen saturation was monitored by pulse oxymeter and we measured the lower SaO2 during exercise and the recovery time of SaO2 after exercise.In comparison to placebo inhalation we found the same small but significant improvement in airflow limitation after salmeterol or ipratropium inhalation, also the distance walked on treadmill increased after bronchodilators. After bronchodilators the magnitude of oxyhaemoglobin desaturation with exercise was similar to that observed after placebo but the duration of the recovery from sustained SaO2 desaturation after exercise was shorter to the same extent as after ipratropium or salmeterol. Dyspnoeic sensation, when assessed by the TLD and by the distance walked at BS score 5, was decreased after salmeterol and after ipratropium bromide to a similar extent.We conclude that the salmeterol, when given in conventional doses, produces significant improvement in the airway obstruction in the recovery of postexercise HbO2 desaturation and in dyspnoeic sensation in patients with COPD, effects which were similar to those observed after inhalation of the anticholinergic agent ipratropium bromide

    Erratum

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    Adaptation of leaves of Vitis vinifera L to seasonal drought as affected by leaf ageVitis 36 (1), 1114 (1997

    Pilot study of losartan for pulmonary hypertension in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease

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    BACKGROUND: Morbidity in COPD results from a combination of factors including hypoxia-induced pulmonary hypertension, in part due to pulmonary vascular remodelling. Animal studies suggest a role of angiotensin II and acute studies in man concur. Whether chronic angiotensin-II blockade is beneficial is unknown. We studied the effects of an angiotensin-II antagonist losartan, on haemodynamic variables, exercise capacity and symptoms. METHODS: This was a double-blind, randomized, parallel group, placebo- controlled study of 48 weeks duration. Forty patients with COPD and pulmonary hypertension (Tran tricuspid pressure gradient (TTPG) = 30 mmHg) were randomised to losartan 50 mg or placebo. Changes in TTPG were assessed at 3, 6 and 12 months. RESULTS: There was a trend for TTPG to increase in the placebo group (baseline 43.4 versus 48.4 mmHg at endpoint) and stay constant in the losartan group (baseline 42.8 versus 43.6 mmHg). More patients in the losartan group (50%) than in the placebo group (22%) showed a clinically meaningful reduction in TTPG at any timepoint; these effects seemed more marked in patients with higher baseline TTPG. There were no clear improvements in exercise capacity or symptoms. CONCLUSION: In this 12-month pilot study, losartan 50 mg had no statistically significant beneficial effect on TTPG, exercise capacity or symptoms in pulmonary hypertension secondary to obstructive disease. A sub-group of patients with higher TTPG may benefit

    Reduced baroreceptor sensitivity in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.

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    Baroreceptor sensitivity, reflected by the slope of the linear regression of the electrocardiographic R-R interval on the rise of systolic blood pressure after injection of phenylephrine, was significantly lower in 27 patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (4.67 +/- 2.67) than in 10 normal subjects (12.07 +/- 3.3) of comparable age (p less than 0.001). In 20 patients in whom right heart catheterisation was performed, pulmonary artery pressure was inversely related to baroreflex sensitivity (r = - 0.603, p less than 0.01). Independent variables such as arterial Po2, Pco2, and mean pulmonary artery pressure were examined in order to assess their ability to predict baroreflex sensitivity. The independent variable that made the most significant contribution was mean pulmonary artery pressure. It seems that the attenuation of baroreflex response in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease is caused mainly by pulmonary hypertension and partly by the central effects of hypoxia and hypercapnia

    Water relation parameters in Vitis vinifera L in drought period. Effects of leaf age

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    The aim of this study was to evaluate the influence of leaf age on physiological mechanims adopted by grape vines (Vitis vinifera L) in order to sustain a favourable growth and production under drought conditions. The relationships between the water, turgor, osmotic potentials and leaf water content were studied during leaf ontogeny using both the pressure/volume and the psychometric technique. The symplasmic water fraction of the total water content decreased with leaf age. The capability for osmoregulation was almost the same in immature and mature leaves but decreased in old leaves. The calculated volumetric modulus of elasticity increased rapidly with leaf maturity and seems to be the dominant strategy for adaptation to drought conditions.Relations hydriques chez Vitis vinifera L soumise à la sécheresse. Effet de l'âge des feuilles. Le but de cette étude est d'évaluer l'influence de l'âge des feuilles sur les mécanismes physiologiques manifestés par la vigne (Vitis vinifera L) afin de maintenir une bonne production en condition de sécheresse. Les relations hydriques dans les feuilles ont été étudiées au cours de leur ontogenèse par l'établissement de courbes pression-volume et l'utilisation de la méthode psychométrique. L'eau symplasmique comme fonction du volume total de l'eau tissulaire diminue en fonction de l'âge des feuilles. La capacité d'osmorégulation paraît avoir les mêmes valeurs chez les feuilles adultes que chez les feuilles jeunes mais elle est fortement diminuée chez les feuilles âgées. Le module d'élasticité volumique calculé augmente rapidement avec l'âge et il semble être le mécanisme prépondérant de l'adaptation à la sécheresse chez la vigne
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