Journal:Health ( Free style text with summary of information from above and more details that can not be expressed by ticking boxes.This article has been retracted to straighten the academic record. In making this decision the Editorial Board follows COPE's Retraction Guidelines. Aim is to promote the circulation of scientific research by offering an ideal research publication platform with due consideration of internationally accepted standards on publication ethics. The Editorial Board would like to extend its sincere apologies for any inconvenience this retraction may have caused. ABSTRACTChildren with bronchial asthma, primarily those with a clinically more severe disease, tend to have a sedentary lifestyle and therefore be inclined to have lower aerobic fitness than their healthy non-asthmatic peers. Aerobic training has a number of well known beneficial effects in both normal and asthmatic children. However, the impact of training on the clinical management of the underlying bronchial asthma remains controversial, particularly in the most severe patients. Clinical evaluation, spirometric tests, symptom limited maximum exercise testing, and exercise challenge tests were performed in a group of children with stable moderate to severe asthma. Forty two patients (24 boys) aged 8-16 were evaluated twice: before and after supervised aerobic training (group 1, n = 26) and two months apart (untrained group 2, n = 16). In results, Spirometric and maximal exercise variables in the initial evaluation were significantly reduced in group 1 (p < 0.05) but medication and clinical scores and the occurrence of exercise induced bronchospasm (EIB) did not differ between the two groups. Aerobic improvement with training (maximal oxygen uptake and/or anaerobic threshold increment > 10% and 100 ml) was inversely related to the baseline level of fitness and was independent of disease severity. Although the clinical score and the occurrence of EIB did not change after training, aerobic improvement was associated with a significant reduction in the medication score and the daily use of both inhaled and oral steroids (p < 0.05). In conclusion, results show that the less fit asthmatic children were able to normalize their aerobic fitness with a supervised training programme without clinical complications. Interestingly, I found a significant association between aerobic improvement and reduction in use of both inhaled and oral steroids.
In recent years, computational fluid dynamics techniques have been employed to advance the understanding of cardiovascular flows and have been largely focused on wall shear stress (WSS) and the effect of disturbed flows on atherosclerosis, and in turn, coronary artery disease (CAD). To gain further insight into the hemodynamics associated with CAD, numerical simulations were conducted on a diseased left circumflex artery (LCX). The vessel geometry was derived from computed tomography angiography (CTA) data of a diseased LCX vessel. The diseased vessel was then artificially restored to represent its initially healthy geometry, and simulations were re-run for comparison. It was determined that alongside the expected low WSS, a region of high vorticity was present at the location where CAD developed, resulting in disturbed blood flow. The vorticity may also be associated with the curvature of the vessel. The relevance of the observed characteristics was further supported by perturbing the geometry of the restored LCX via dilation to account for inaccuracies in the restoration process. This research suggests that vorticity is an important factor in assessing the risk for CAD, potentially improving the accuracy of non-invasive, computational diagnosis. In turn, as computational analysis of the coronary arteries improves, it is likely that unnecessary invasive diagnosis methods, such as an angiogram, can be avoided.
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