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1.
J Nucl Cardiol ; : 101868, 2024 Apr 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38685397

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Evaluation of sufficient adenosine response constitutes a significant challenge in myocardial perfusion imaging (MPI). Splenic switch-off in MPI studies denotes a visually (qualitatively) reduced splenic radiotracer signal during adenosine stress and is considered indicative of sufficient cardiac vasodilation. In this study, we examined semi-quantitative and quantitative approaches to splenic switch-off assessment using [15O]H2O-PET with either summed activity images or calculated parametric splenic blood flow images. METHODS: Cohort 1: 90 clinical patients undergoing [15O]H2O MPI in whom adenosine response was considered clinically adequate were identified to characterize the corresponding splenic switch-off. Spleen stress/rest-ratio (SSR-ratio) was calculated as spleen stress signal intensity/spleen rest signal intensity on both summed activity and parametric blood flow images. Cohort 2: Twenty-five patients with repeat MPI due to suspected insufficient adenosine response were identified to observe if splenic switch-off on the initial MPI could predict the outcome of the repeat MPI. Cohort 3: Fifty-four patients who were considered adenosine responders on MPI and who had a coronary angiogram (CAG) follow-up within 3 months after MPI served as a separate validation group. RESULTS: Splenic switch-off was present in most patients with a clinically sufficient adenosine response (Cohort 1), illustrated by both visual (74.4%-86.7%), semi-quantitative (summed activity images) (85.6%), and quantitative (parametric blood flow images) (92.2%) evaluation, which corresponds to the distribution in patients with sufficient adenosine response and follow-up CAG (Cohort 3). In patients suspected of insufficient adenosine response on the initial MPI (Cohort 2), the repeat MPI only yielded different myocardial blood flow (MBF) results if the initial SSR-ratio was >0.90 on splenic parametric blood flow images. CONCLUSION: quantitative splenic switch-off assessment on parametric blood flow images was superior to the semi-quantitative splenic switch-off approach. Patients with a suspected insufficient initial adenosine response and SSR-ratio >0.90 can benefit from a repeat MPI. Thus, the integration of quantitative splenic switch-off using parametric blood flow images in the evaluation of adenosine response may support future clinical decision-making.

2.
J Appl Physiol (1985) ; 134(4): 1047-1062, 2023 04 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36825645

RESUMO

Low-load blood flow-restricted resistance exercise (BFRRE) constitutes an effective means to produce skeletal muscle hypertrophy. Nonetheless, its applicability to counteract the age-related skeletal muscle decay at a cellular level, is not clear. Therefore, we investigated the effect of BFRRE on muscle fiber morphology, integrated muscle protein synthesis, muscle stem cells (MuSCs), myonuclear content, and muscle functional capacity in healthy older individuals. Twenty-three participants with a mean age of 66 yr (56-75 yr) were randomized to 6 wk of supervised BFRRE (3 sessions per week) or non-exercise control (CON). Biopsies were collected from the vastus lateralis before and after the intervention. Immunofluorescent microscopy was utilized to assess muscle fiber type-specific cross-sectional area (CSA) as well as MuSC and myonuclear content. Deuterium oxide was orally administered throughout the intervention period, enabling assessment of integrated myofibrillar and connective tissue protein fractional synthesis rate (FSR). BFRRE produced uniform ∼20% increases in the fiber CSA of both type I and type II fibers (P < 0.05). This occurred concomitantly with improvements in both maximal muscle strength and strength-endurance capacity but in the absence of increased MuSC content and myonuclear addition. The observed muscle fiber hypertrophy was not mirrored by increases in either myofibrillar or connective tissue FSR. In conclusion, BFRRE proved effective in stimulating skeletal muscle growth and increased muscle function in older individuals, which advocates for the use of BFRRE as a countermeasure of age-related deterioration of skeletal muscle mass and function.NEW & NOTEWORTHY We provide novel insight, that as little as 6 wk of low-load blood flow-restricted resistance exercise (BFRRE) produces pronounced fiber type-independent hypertrophy, alongside improvements across a broad range of muscle functional capacity in older individuals. Notably, since these results were obtained with a modest exercise volume and in a very time-efficient manner, BFRRE may represent a potent exercise strategy to counteract age-related muscle decay.


Assuntos
Treinamento Resistido , Humanos , Idoso , Treinamento Resistido/métodos , Fibras Musculares Esqueléticas/metabolismo , Músculo Esquelético/metabolismo , Hipertrofia , Músculo Quadríceps/metabolismo
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