Muscle cell leakage and hormonal changes were compared immediately after and during the 3 days following a 24 h endurance run (R24h) in 8 subjects, and a 10 h triathlon non-competitive race (T10h) in 6 subjects. The study showed three main differences: 1) plasma enzyme increases were considerably more significant in R24h than in T10h: compared with resting levels, creatine kinase increased x 120 after R24h but only x 2 after T10h; lactic dehydrogenase x 4, as opposed to x 1.5; and transaminases only showed an increase after R24h. The plasma myoglobin increase after R24h was double that found after T10h; 2) for the same magnitude of plasma aldosterone and cortisol after R24h and T10h (3 times the resting levels), a highly significant decrease in urinary Na+ (p less than 0.001) and an increase in urinary K+ (p less than 0.01) were found only after R24h; and 3) the plasma free noradrenaline level increased significantly after R24h (x 2.6) whereas it was unchanged after T10h. In contrast, the plasma level of conjugated dopamine increased only after T10h (x 3.7, p less than 0.05). These results suggest that long-distance running causes more muscular lesions than the triathlon, and that important factors other than aldosterone are probably involved in the regulation of urinary electrolyte excretions during T10h.
Serum erythropoietin (Epo) concentration was compared prenatally in adequate (AGA) and small for gestational age (SGA) fetuses. Fifty-four percutaneous umbilical blood samplings were paired with maternal blood and assessed for Epo, hematocrit and reticulocyte count. Seventeen fetuses were growth-retarded (SGA) on the basis of ultrasonic biometry and birth weight. Controls (AGA; n = 37) underwent cordocentesis for risk of toxoplasmosis, maternal age or malformations (CNS, GI, heart). No cytogenetic abnormality or infections was found in the 54 fetuses. Linear and polynomial regressions were fitted to determine correlations between parameters. Nonparametric Mann-Whitney test was used for comparison between groups. Gestational age at sampling was similar in AGA and SGA. The SGA fetuses had a higher Epo concentration than controls (p < 0.001). Fetal AGA Epo increased significantly throughout pregnancy (p < 0.01) but did not correlate with maternal Epo (p > 0.05). An inverse correlation was found between fetal reticulocyte count and Epo concentration (p < 0.02). The mechanism of high Epo level in SGA fetuses may involve low pO2 and hemoconcentration.
beta-Thromboglobulin (beta TG) plasma levels were determined in 52 female breast cancer patients at different stages and in 39 healthy controls (22 women and 17 men) of similar age distribution. Beta TG levels were high (mean +/- SD:61.6 +/- 59.1 ng/ml) in patients before any treatment compared to controls (mean +/- SD:21.2 +/- 7.4 ng/ml) and the difference was statistically significant (p less than 0.001). No correlation with disease stage was observed. No other coagulation parameters were abnormal except fibrinogen, which increased. Fibrinogen degradation products (FDP) also increased but only in metastatic patients. Chemotherapy appeared to induce a considerable decrease in initial values at the end of the first cycle without modifying the platelet count. In addition, an attempt was made to correlate the beta TG plasma level investigated serially for several months with disease evolution.
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