Seventeen type I male diabetic adolescents and 17 control subjects matched for age, height, and weight were submitted to maximal exercise on a bicycle ergometer. The diabetic subjects were divided into two groups according to their degree of metabolic control using total glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1): group 1, diabetics with HbA1 less than 8.5% (n = 9) and group 2, diabetics with HbA1 greater than 8.5% (n = 8). Oxygen uptake, pulmonary ventilation, and heart rate were recorded at rest and at maximal load. Glucose, lactate, and free fatty acids were determined in blood before and after exercise. Maximal work load and oxygen uptake were significantly lower in the two diabetic groups than in the healthy controls. An inverse relationship was observed between HbA1 concentration and the maximal work load (r = -0.63; P less than 0.01). It can be concluded that diabetic adolescents should obtain the best possible degree of metabolic control to improve their performances.
VAI Resort, situated across the street from the site of Super Bowl LVII, presents a number of acoustical challenges, not the least of which is a world-class, 360-degree outdoor performance venue. Performers will blast an 8-storey hotel located 250 ft away with music of all types, which
audiences will enjoy from the balconies of their hotel rooms. The challenge of modeling such a venue comes in simplifying it down to manageable pieces. Does a balcony with a hotel room behind it behave like a Helmholtz resonator? How do the acoustics change if 90% of the balconies are open
to the hotel rooms beyond? What if 50% are open? 25% are open? Such a variable acoustic space presents a significant modeling challenge. A methodology for tackling such a large-scale project is presented, with modeling results, auralizations, and comparisons to real-world measurements. Findings
include a swing in RT60 of more than 25% when all balcony doors are opened versus closed.
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