190 research outputs found

    Effects of Breathing Cool Air during Cycling Exercise in the Heat

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    INTRODUCTION: The purpose of this study was to establish the ability of the Core Cooler device to prevent rises in physiological heat strain of trained male cyclists during cycling exercise in the heat. METHODS: 15 healthy male cyclists cycled at 50-70% VO2max for 75 minutes in a heat chamber of 31°C & 55% RH while breathing through the Core Cooler device under three different conditions: 1:4 ratio without ice termed control (CN), 1:4 ratio with ice termed low intermittent (LI), and at 1:1 ratio with ice termed high intermittent (HI). Data collected every 15 minutes assessing intestinal temperature (TGI), heart rate (HR), physiological strain index (PSI), blood pressure (BP), mean skin temperature (TSK), and perception of thirst, thermal sensation, and rate of perceived exertion, inspired air temperature, ambient temperature and relative humidity in all trials. VO2 workload and respiratory rates (RR) recorded three times at evenly spaced time points (12.30, 42.30, 1.12.30), during all trials respectively. Statistical significance was set at a p value of 0.05 and measured using repeated measures ANOVA and post hoc t-test. RESULTS: No statistically significant differences in diet, USG, temperature, %RH, VO2 workload, or RR were found between any trial. Inspired air temperature averaged significantly different between CNvsLI & CN¬vsHI (p\u3c0.01, CN 30.92±0.35°C, LI 19.81±0.44°C, & HI 19.28±0.72°C), but not between LIvsHI (p=1.000). Physiological responses between trials found insignificant differences. TGI produced significant interactions between trials (p = 0.033) averaging CN 37.86±0.02°C, LI 37.91±0.10°C, & HI 37.80±0.07°C, but post hoc analysis provided no difference between any time or trial (p\u3e0.05). HR (p=0.103), systolic BP (n=11, p = 0.102), diastolic BP (n=11, p = 0.190), TSK (n=5, p=0.464), thirst (p=0.773), thermal sensation (p=0.709), and RPE (p=0.669) were not significantly different between trials. CONCLUSION: Modifications to the Core Cooler device are needed providing greater inhalation capabilities of cool air during exercise in the heat for significant attenuation of physiological heat strain. The Core Cooler in its current form will not provide an adequate prevention to heat illness, prolong endurance capabilities, or enhanced performance to a significant degree. This research was funded by Core Cooler Company, LLC

    Does the host match the content? A taxonomical update on online consumption communities

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    This article proposes a taxonomy of online consumption communities in order to address this rather ambiguously conceptualised research field. Specifically, intercommunity differences are investigated with regard to how content focus (brand vs activity) and its congruency with the type of host (doubled vs mixed) affect consumers’ posting behaviour. Based on an online survey (n = 888), a series of regressions of various benefits on posting behaviour supports the usability of the proposed taxonomy. In particular, social benefits had the strongest effect on consumers’ posting behaviour across all communities, while the effects of functional, altruistic and sharing benefits varied in significance and direction of influence when accounting for the different community characteristics. These findings help marketing managers to design online communities and motivate consumers to contribute. © 2015, Westburn Publishers Ltd

    Follicle-stimulating hormone signal transduction: Role of carbohydrate in aromatase induction in immature rat Sertoli cells

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    Receptor activated adenylate cyclase acts as a major transmembrane signalling system. It is widely accepted that upon binding to its receptor, follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) activates the cAMP-dependent pathway which in turn mediates FSH-induced estradiol production in Sertoli cells. Studies utilizing several chemically derived variants of FSH have demonstrated that these variants bind to the FSH receptors with equal avidity but differ in their ability to activate cAMP-dependent pathways. Since cAMP is believed to be the second messenger responsible for FSH signal transduction, we tested two hypotheses: (1) that the effects of different oFSH variants on cAMP production and aromatase induction (as measured by estradiol production) would be in parallel; and (2) that deglycosylated ovine FSH (DG-oFSH) would antagonize the ability of intact oFSH to stimulate aromatase induction, similar to its reported antagonistic effect on cAMP production.Immature rat (7- to 10-day-old) Sertoli cells were cultured and the effects of several different oFSH variants on cAMP production and/or aromatase induction were tested. The variants tested were native oFSH, DG-oFSH, asialo oFSH (AS-oFSH), a recombinant of intact LH[alpha] and FSH[beta] ([alpha] + [beta]) and a recombinant of deglycosylated LH[alpha] and intact FSH[beta] (DG[alpha] + [beta]). Both native oFSH and [alpha] + [beta] recombinant at relatively large doses (10 ng) elicited a significant increase in extracellular cAMP accumulation as well as total cAMP production. In contrast, DG-oFSH did not produce an increase in cAMP even at 10-fold higher doses than native oFSH. Intracellular cAMP concentrations did not increase following stimulation with native oFSH, DG-oFSH or DG[alpha] + [beta].In contrast to the divergent effects of oFSH and DG-oFSH on cAMP production all variants of oFSH stimulated estradiol production from Sertoli cells albeit with varying potencies. The sensitivity (minimal effective dose) and ED50 (dose at which half maximal response is achieved) of the estradiol (E2) response curve to increasing concentrations of native oFSH were 0.025 +/- 0.01 and 0.33 +/- 0.05 ng, respectively. Asialo-oFSH (AS-oFSH) increased E2 production with a potency (comparative dose required for effect) similar to that of native oFSH. In contrast, there was a 10-fold reduction in potency of DG-oFSH (ED50 of 3.27 +/- 1.7 ng). The efficacy (maximum effect on aromatase induction) of native, DG and AS-oFSH were equipotent. Coincubation of DG-oFSH (0.005-100 ng) with oFSH (0.01-0.625 ng) demonstrated the inductive effects to be additive. In contrast to the reduced potency of DG-oFSH, DG[alpha] -- [beta] recombinants (0.156-160 ng) increased E2 production with a potency similar to that of the native oFSH.Our data suggest: (1) the effects of oFSH variants on cAMP production and aromatase induction are not always parallel; (2) DG-oFSH is a weak agonist and not an antagonist of oFSH-mediated aromatase induction; (3) the reduced potency of DG-oFSH must involve oligosaccharides internal to sialic acid; and (4) depleting the carbohydrate moiety on the [alpha] subunit alone may not be adequate to reduce the potency of oFSH to induce aromatase. Since DG-oFSH does not increase cAMP accumulation, but is able to induce aromatase, the FSH-mediated induction of aromatase may be transduced through other signal pathways. Alternatively, the maximal steroidogenic response may be induced by small, but undetectable, increases in intracellular cAMP concentrations or availability of segregated cAMP pools.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/29186/1/0000239.pd

    Intra-abdominal hypertension due to heparin - induced retroperitoneal hematoma in patients with ventricle assist devices: report of four cases and review of the literature

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    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Introduction</p> <p>Elevated intra-abdominal pressure (IAP) has been identified as a cascade of pathophysiologic changes leading in end-organ failure due to decreasing compliance of the abdomen and the development of abdomen compartment syndrome (ACS). Spontaneous retroperitoneal hematoma (SRH) is a rare clinical entity seen almost exclusively in association with anticoagulation states, coagulopathies and hemodialysis; that may cause ACS among patients in the intensive care unit (ICU) and if treated inappropriately represents a high mortality rate.</p> <p>Case Presentation</p> <p>We report four patients (a 36-year-old Caucasian female, a 59-year-old White-Asian male, a 64-year-old Caucasian female and a 61-year-old Caucasian female) that developed an intra-abdominal hypertension due to heparin-induced retroperitoneal hematomas after implantation of ventricular assist devices because of heart failure. Three of the patients presented with dyspnea at rest, fatigue, pleura effusions in chest XR and increased heart rate although b-blocker therapy. A 36-year old female (the forth patient) presented with sudden, severe shortness of breath at rest, 10 days after an "acute bronchitis". At the time of the event in all cases international normalized ratio (INR) was <3.5 and partial thromboplastin time <65 sec. The patients were treated surgically, the large hematomas were evacuated and the systemic manifestations of the syndrome were reversed.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Identifying patients in the ICU at risk for developing ACS with constant surveillance can lead to prevention. ACS is the natural progression of pressure-induced end-organ changes and develops if IAP is not recognized and treated in a timely manner. Failure to recognize and appropriately treat ACS is fatal while timely intervention - if indicated - is associated with improvements in organ function and patient survival. Means for surgical decision making are based on clinical indicators of adverse physiology, rather than on a single measured parameter.</p

    Borderline Personality Disorder Symptoms in College Students: The Complex Interplay between Alexithymia, Emotional Dysregulation and Rumination.

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    Both Emotional Cascade Theory and Linehan's Biosocial Theory suggest dysregulated behaviors associated with Borderline Personality Disorder (BPD) emerge, in part, because of cycles of rumination, poor emotional recognition and poor emotion regulation. In this study we examined relationships between rumination, alexithymia, and emotion regulation in predicting dysregulated behaviors associated with BPD (e.g. self-harm, substance use, aggression), and explored both indirect and moderating effects among these variables. The sample comprised 2261 college students who completed self-report measures of the aforementioned constructs. BPD symptoms, stress, family psychological illness, and alexithymia exerted direct effects on behaviors. Symptoms had an indirect effect on behaviors through rumination, alexithymia and emotional dysregulation. In addition, the relationship between symptoms and dysregulated behaviors was conditional on level of rumination and alexithymia. Implications for early identification and treatment of BPD and related behaviors in college settings are discussed

    Keep them alive! Design and Evaluation of the “Community Fostering Reference Model”

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    Firms host online communities for commercial purposes, for example in order to integrate customers into ideation for new product development. The success of these firm-hosted online communities depends entirely on the cooperation of a high number of customers that constantly produce valuable knowledge for firms. However, in practice, the majority of successfully implemented communities suffers from stagnation and even a decrease of member activities over time. Literature provides numerous guidelines on how to build and launch these online communities. While these models describe the initial steps of acquiring and activating a community base from scratch very well and explicitly, they neglect continuous member activation and acquistion after a successful launch. Against this background, the authors propose the Community Fostering Reference Model (CoFoRM), which represents a set of general procedures and instruments to continuously foster member activity. In this paper, the authors present the theory-driven design as well as the evaluation of the CoFoRM in a practical use setting. The evaluation results reveal that the CoFoRM represents a valuable instrument in the daily working routine of community managers, since it efficiently helps activating community members especially in the late phases of a community’s LifeCycle
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