More exciting comparative physiology sessions at EB 2012! [Life Lines]

In looking through the online program for this years' EB, I came across additional comparative physiology seminars that I am very much looking forward to attending (to see the prior list of must-see seminars, click here):

Monday April 23rd: 8:00am-10:00am: "Hypoxia Inducible Factors in Health and Disease," chaired by B. Rees, CG Wilson, and M Watanabe.

10:30-12:30: "Sodium and water homeostasis: Genetic and comparative models," chaired by T Pannabecker and K Hyndman.

12:45-3:15pm: Don't forget to attend the Scholander poster session to meet the future scientists in comparative physiology and hear about their research. (posters: D522-D551) Also be sure to stop by the other comparative physiology posters listed in the program!

Tuesday April 24th: 12:45-3:15: More comparative physiology posters!

Wednesday April 25th: 8:00-10:00am: "Gastrointestinal physiology and the microbiome," chaired by RT Worrel and APS Past-President, HV Carey. There are some really neat comparative physiology seminars in this session!

I look forward to seeing everyone at the APS 125th Anniversary opening and closing ceremonies as well!

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More exciting comparative physiology sessions at EB 2012! [Life Lines]

Clock Evolution

This post, originally published on January 16, 2005, was modified from one of my written prelims questions from early 2000.

EVOLUTIONARY PHYSIOLOGY OF BIOLOGICAL CLOCKS

Circadian clocks allow organisms to predict, instead of merely react to, cyclic (predictable) changes in the environment. A sentence similar to this one is the opening phrase of many a paper in the field of chronobiology. Besides becoming a truth by virtue of frequent repetition, such a statement appeals to common sense. It is difficult to imagine a universe in which it was not true. Yet, the data supporting the above statement are few and far-between. Believe it or not, the data are not always supporting it either.

This post will attempt to briefly review the literature on evolutionary and adaptive aspects of biological rhythmicity. Also, using the perspectives and the methodology of evolutionary physiology, I will try to suggest some ways to test the hypothesis stated in the first sentence above.

REASONING BEHIND THE ARGUMENT FROM COMMON SENSE

For outside observers of the field of chronobiology and its recent successes in molecular, neural and medical aspects of biological rhythmicity, it may come as a surprise that the field was founded by ecologists, ethologists and evolutionary biologists. When the statements about adaptive function of clocks were initially made, the authors were much more careful than is usually seen today. It was meant as a hypothesis to be tested, and elaborate reasoning was often offered to persuade the reader why it might be true (Daan 1981, Pittendrigh 1967,1993, Enright 1970).

One of the most common arguments that a clock must be adaptive (for one reason or another) was its ubiquity all plants, fungi, protista, invertebrates and vertebrates (more recently cyanobacteria, too) tested by the pioneers in the field showed circadian rhythmicity. The way those rhythms behaved in the laboratory in various experimental treatments was surprisingly similar over all species. Thus, the reasoning goes, if a physiological mechanism is found in every living thing, and it seems to work in the same way in all of them, then it must have originated early due to natural selection and was preserved over eons due to natural selection.

Some of the earliest experimental work was designed to test the genetic basis of biological rhythmicity. Many generations of laboratory organisms were raised and spent all their lives in aperiodic environments, yet the rhythms persist (Sheeba et al. 1999). Period of the rhythm was species -specific, highly heritable, and very amenable to artificial selection. So, if it is in the genes, the clock must have evolved due to some kind of selective pressure.

When reviewing evolutionary literature on biological rhythms, it is often difficult to distinguish between hypotheses of current utility from hypotheses of origin. It was often assumed that same selective pressures which keep the clocks ticking all over biosphere today, are the pressures responsible for the initial discovery of timing mechanisms by early forms of life.

The current adaptive functions of biological rhythms are often divided into two, mutually not exclusive categories. The Internal Synchronization hypothesis stresses the need for temporal separation of incompatible biochemical and physiological processes within a body (or cell), and for temporal synchronization of processes which need to coincide. An example of the former would be temporal separation of photosynthesis from nitrogen fixation. For the latter, surge of a hormone and availability of its receptor need to be synchronized for the generation of the endocrine effect. Evolution of such timing control mechanisms would presumably alleviate energetic costs of constant production of enzymes and their substrates.

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Clock Evolution

UPDATE: Five college students hospitalized after science experiment

STORM LAKE, Iowa (KTIV) -

Officials say five students from a Buena Vista University physiology class ingested caffeine as part of a student-led experiment. That experiment, however, went terribly wrong. Officials say the students ended up in the hospital after an overdose of caffeine.

BVU's Dean of Students, says students are a priority, and she's very concerned about their safety. That's why they are taking the precautions that they are.

"We don't want to interrupt the student's learning and educational experience. We just want to ensure that we are taking the proper steps to let them go forward and complete their semester," said McKeon.

Randy Hummel was in that physiology class. He says the students had separated into groups to do their experiments. He wasn't in the same group as the students who overdosed. Hummel says the objective was to see how the body reacts to different levels of substances.

"When we first heard about it, we didn't think it was that big of a deal, but then we heard about the dosage and it was extreme and we don't know how it got there," said Hummel.

Officials say students took high levels of caffeine orally, mixed with a liquid. While moderate levels of caffeine are okay, high doses can make you sick.

"School officials say the students' symptoms included nausea, dizziness, and jitters. Those are all consistent with the effects of caffeine.

"We're very grateful that the students are all healthy and appear to be doing well and that the situation will be corrected," said McKeon.

Those students will be in the hospital through Wednesday. McKeon says their fellow students are sticking together.

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UPDATE: Five college students hospitalized after science experiment

Final Winner of the “What’s New in Comparative Physiology” t-shirt contest! [Life Lines]

Congratulations to Patricia Villalta, a graduate student at the University of South Alabama College of Medicine, our final winner of the "What's New in Comparative Physiology?" t-shirt contest! Here are her reasons for being excited about going to this year's Experimental Biology meeting:

"Dear Dr. Dolittle,

Every year, I get excited about the Experimental Biology meeting because unexpected opportunities are bound to happen. For example, this past year, I attended for the first time the Science Policy Committee's Symposium "How to Become An Advocate: A Workshop for Scientists", where I discovered that there were many opportunities for people of all levels of science to get involved in science advocacy. I now advocate for science every chance I get and write to my senators and representatives on a consistent basis. In addition to being exposed to a new interest, I was also able to meet and interact with the Chair of the APS Public Affairs Committee, and we have maintained correspondence after the EB meeting. Also, I took full advantage of my time with members of the APS Respiration Section throughout the meeting and offered help at the different society functions. This allowed me to network with everyone from the APS President to corporate sponsors. I was asked by the incoming Chair of the Respiration Section to become Chair of the Trainee Subcommittee. I also attended "Meet the Editors" of the APS journals, volunteered to serve as a guide for high school students and teachers attending EB, and visited the NIH for a campus tour and seminars. By the end of the meeting, I had seized every unexpected opportunity, and for a fledgling like me, that makes EB a whirlwind experience.

Similarly, the EB experience allows me the chance to talk about comparative physiology with the greats in the field. I like to spark conversations about my favorite topic- how comparative physiology is making a comeback in the field after years of thinking that other routes, such as DNA and signaling pathways, were the key to solving the unknowns in the basic medical sciences. It is exciting to be part of the next generation of scientists who are being trained to think about the physiology of a problem and to be able to paint a clear, overview picture of what may have gone wrong. For example, my work focuses on mechanisms of edema formation in the lung. Our understanding of edema progression in the lung, as put forth by Dr. Nathan Staub, was that fluid accumulation started in the interstitium around larger vessels, and once the lymphatic removal of this fluid was overwhelmed, alveolar flooding ensued. We now appreciate that activation of certain calcium channels can cause direct alveolar flooding without any evidence of peribrochovascular interstitial edema. Our understanding of the physiology has been turned on its head, and its now up to us future scientists to truly understand how this may occur, and that in itself is tremendously exciting.

I hope I get to meet you this year at Experimental Biology!

Respectfully yours,

Patricia Villalta"

Thank you Patricia for your letter. Don't forget to wear your t-shirt at the meeting for a chance to win free coffee!

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Final Winner of the "What's New in Comparative Physiology" t-shirt contest! [Life Lines]

Charity Soccer Tournament:

The UA Women's Club Soccer Team, with the support of Campus Rec and Honors Student Council, is putting on a barefoot 3v3 charity soccer tournament to benefit Grassroot Soccer (GRS). All of the proceeds from this event will go straight to GRS--an awesome NGO that uses soccer as a platform to gather and educate kids in Sub-Saharan Africa about HIV/AIDS. Just $25 can provide one child with the knowledge and life-skills to remain HIV-free. Check out grassrootsoccer.org for more information about their work and success in Africa.
Come play in our 3v3 tournament on April 7 from 11-4 on the Mall to help the cause. It's only $10 to sign up or $20 gets you an awesome Grassroot Soccer dry fit jersey in addition to a spot in the tournament. Gather a team of up to 5 of your friends (3 players minimum) and come join the fun! No soccer experience is necessary!! There will be prizes for winners, music, and plenty of free food.
Sign up at: https://grassrootsoccer.wufoo.com/forms/university-of-arizona-3v3-soccer-tournament/
Visit the Facebook page at: http://www.facebook.com/events/324097504305121/
For more information feel free to contact Aubri Carman at acarman25@gmail.com.
Thanks for your support!

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MBBS student tries to commit suicide

PTI Mar 29, 2012, 06.52PM IST

LUCKNOW: Apparently depressed over failing in his physiology paper, an MBBS student of the Chhatrapati Shahuji Maharaj Medical University on Thursday allegedly tried to commit suicide by consuming a poisonous substance.

Neeraj Kumar, an MBBS student of 2010 batch, was found unconscious in his hostel room this morning after which he was rushed to the Trauma centre, where his condition was stated to be stable.

The students, who secured admission in the reserved category had alleged caste bias in the campus claiming that they were deliberately failed. Kumar was also a student in the reserved category.

Kumar, a gold medalist of his batch in the anatomy discipline was not able to move to the second year because he has been repeatedly failing in his physiology subject since 2010.

His batchmates said that he was upset after not being able to pass the physiology paper.

University vice chancellor D K Gupta had written to the Medical Council of India last asking for permission to pass students of reserved category who could not clear their first professional exams for several years.

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MBBS student tries to commit suicide

Accused drunken driver blows ‘amazing’ .384

A Brockton man defied common physiology when Rhode Island state troopers say they caught him driving with a blood-alcohol level of .384, nearly five times the Bay States legal driving limit and amazingly, the second highest a veteran trooper has seen in his decades-long career.

The amazing thing is, his blood alcohol level was that high and he was coherent and awake, Rhode Island State Police Capt. Frank B. Castellone said of Dammon McLaren, 32. It was pretty scary to think he was driving a car.

McLaren was unsteady on his feet, slurred his speech and reeked of alcohol when police pulled over his car in Providence early Sunday, according to state police. After submitting to a Breathalyzer, McLaren blew a .373, then a .384, police said levels Castellone said are only topped by a 2008 drunk driver who registered a .49 when Rhode Island state police stopped him.

Its the second highest Ive ever seen in 22 years, Castellone said.

State police said a person normally passes out by the time he or she hits .30, and levels approaching .40 can put a person in danger of a coma and even death due to respiratory arrest.

McLaren, since released, is due back in Providence court on April 6, Castellone said. He is facing charges of driving with BAC of 0.15 or greater, and was issued a traffic summons for a laned roadway violation, not using a turn signal and operating with an expired registration.

This behavior will not be tolerated on the highways of our state, Col. Steven G. ODonnell, Superintendent of the Rhode Island State Police, said in a statement. We will use all resources available to the Division, including overtime patrols using low profile vehicles, to remain vigilant and curb this activity.

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Accused drunken driver blows 'amazing' .384

Health experts recommend you set your toddlers free

Public release date: 27-Mar-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Judy Letourneau judy.letourneau@nrcresearchpress.com Canadian Science Publishing (NRC Research Press)

Ottawa, Canada (March 27, 2012) In response to an urgent call from public health, health care, child care, and fitness practitioners, the Canadian Society for Exercise Physiology (CSEP), with assistance from multiple partners, has developed two important sets of guidelines directed at improving the health and activity levels of infants and toddlers. The Canadian Sedentary Behaviour Guidelines for the Early Years (aged 0-4 years) and the Canadian Physical Activity Guidelines for the Early Years (aged 0-4 years) are presented in the April 2012 issue of the journal Applied Physiology, Nutrition, and Metabolism (APNM).

"The development and publication of the first evidence-informed guidelines for the early years represents an important public health advancement in Canada," says Mark Tremblay, Director of Healthy Active Living and Obesity Research (HALO) at the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario (CHEO) Research Institute, Chair of the CSEP Guidelines Steering Committee and lead author of the published papers. "The guidelines are based on the best available evidence, input from researchers, clinicians and care-providers and harmonized with international initiatives."

"As leaders in physical activity, we aim to increase the Canadian public's awareness, adoption and implementation of the new Guidelines for the Early Years," says Earl Noble, President of CSEP. "We've worked with numerous partners, including the HALO Research Group, to develop these Guidelines. CSEP is proud to provide this scientific-based guidance to assist promoting physical activity and discouraging sedentary behaviours in young Canadians."

Caregivers are advised to minimize the time infants, toddlers and preschoolers spend during waking hours sitting or being restrained (e.g., stroller, high chair). For those under 2 years, screen time (e.g., TV, computer, electronic games) is to be avoided. For children 2-4 years, screen time should be limited to less than one hour per day, and less is better. The guidelines for physical activity recommend that infants should be active several times daily through interactive floorbased play. Toddlers and preschoolers should accumulate at least 180 minutes of physical activity throughout the day.

More activity, they advise, provides greater benefits.

"Research on Canadian school-aged children has shown that obesity is rampant, physical fitness is declining, and activity levels are at an all time low. The time for early intervention has arrived," says Terry Graham, Editor, APNM. "These new Guidelines are an essential foundation for the health and ongoing development of our children."

The Guidelines for the Early Years (aged 0-4 years) are presented in French and English in the journal APNM at http://www.nrcresearchpress.com/apnm

###

Original post:
Health experts recommend you set your toddlers free

Children four and under should move more, sit less and avoid screens

Canada's first-ever physical activity and sedentary behaviour guidelines for the early years released

TORONTO, March 27, 2012 /PRNewswire/ - Children aged four and under should move more and sit less every day as recommended by the first-ever Canadian Physical Activity and Sedentary Behaviour Guidelines for the Early Years. All children aged one to four should accumulate at least 180 minutes of physical activity throughout the day, and children under the age of one should be physically active several times daily. Parents and caregivers should also limit prolonged sitting for more than one hour at a time and excessive screen time.

The Physical Activity and Sedentary Behaviour Guidelines for the Early Years (ages 0-4 years) are Canada's first systematic evidence-based physical activity guidelines and the world's first standalone sedentary behaviour guidelines for this age group, which puts Canada at the forefront of the emerging body of sedentary research. They are presented by the Canadian Society for Exercise Physiology (CSEP) and ParticipACTION, with support from the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario Research Institute, Healthy Active Living and Obesity Research Group (CHEO-HALO).

Although children in the early years are assumed to be naturally busy and active, they spend 73 to 84 per cent of their waking hours being sedentary. In addition, despite the detrimental effects on physical and social development, most young children are exposed to screen time too early in life and for too long.

"Regular physical activity is essential at a young age as it contributes to bone and skeletal health, motor skill development, psychosocial health, cognitive development and healthy body weights," says Dr. Mark Tremblay, Director, CHEO-HALO. "It is also key to avoid the harms associated with excessive sedentary behaviour, in particular the negative effects of screen time exposure, in the earliest years of development. Lifestyle patterns set in the early years predict health outcomes later in life."

For healthy growth and development, the Canadian Physical Activity Guidelines for the Early Years recommend:

Minimizing sedentary behaviour, including screen time, during waking hours is just as important as being physically active. Sedentary behaviours are characterized by little physical movement and low energy expenditure and include sitting or reclining for long periods of time. For healthy growth and development, the Canadian Sedentary Behaviour Guidelines for the Early Years recommend:

"These guidelines place a high value on the benefits of physical activity that begin in a child's early years and accumulate throughout life," says Kelly Murumets, President and CEO of ParticipACTION, the national voice of physical activity and sport participation. "It is crucial for parents and caregivers to give young children regular opportunities to move more, and it can be as simple as getting outdoors to explore the neighbourhood rather than sitting in front of the TV, or by playing on a mat reaching, pushing or crawling rather than keeping children idle in a high chair."

To download a copy of the new Canadian Physical Activity Guidelines and Sedentary Behaviour Guidelines for the Early Years please visit http://www.csep.ca/guidelines and participACTION.com.

About the Canadian Society for Exercise Physiology The Canadian Society for Exercise Physiology (CSEP) is the principal body for physical activity, health and fitness research and personal training in Canada.CSEP fosters the generation, growth, synthesis, transfer and application of thehighest quality research, education and training related to exercise physiology and science. CSEP is the GOLD STANDARD of health and fitness professionals dedicated to getting Canadians active safely by providing the highest quality customized and specialized physical activity and fitness programs, guidance and advice based on extensive training and evidence-based research. For more information, visit http://www.csep.ca.

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Children four and under should move more, sit less and avoid screens

New Analysis Could Give Cues About When to Move Infants From NICU

Article is published in the Journal of Applied Physiology

Newswise Bethesda, Md. (March 26, 2012)Late gestation is a busy time for babies getting ready for life outside the womb, particularly for functions critical to life such as breathing and maintaining an adequate heartbeat. These two functions are connected in mature infants and healthy people throughout life, so measuring their level of connectedness can give doctors a cue about whether an infant is ready to head home or needs to remain in the care of the neonatal intensive care unit (NICU). Current methods to analyze this connection are not yet fully developed, leaving doctors and nurses without an optimal way to deal with periodically missing data or natural variations in breathing or heartbeat. Now, however, researchers in Virginia have found a way around this problem by using a new analytical method that looks for so-called cardiorespiratory interaction using individual breaths and heartbeats and relating the two in time. The findings shed light on which infants may be mature enough to leave the NICU, showing that postnatal age seems to be an indicator of maturity, but birth weight or gestational age at birth are not.

The article is entitled Breath-By-Breath Analysis of Cardiorespiratory Interaction for Quantifying Developmental Maturity in Premature Infants. It appears in the current edition of the Journal of Applied Physiology, published by the American Physiological Society.

Methodology The researchers collected data from the bedside monitors of 1,202 infants cared for in the University of Virginia NICU from January 2009 to June 2011. This data included both electrocardiogram waveforms (an indicator of heartbeats) and chest impedance signals (an indicator of breaths) from both infants considered to have very low birth weights and those with normal birth weights. The researchers paired these two measures in sliding four minute windows, using software to determine whether patterns in breathing correlated with patterns in heartbeats. They also collected other data on these patients, including gestational age at birth (a measure of prematurity), postnatal age (length of time after birth), and age at discharge from the hospital.

Results The researchers were able to gather 34,600 breathing and heartbeat records for the 1,202 patients, corresponding to an average of 13 days of data for each infant. Their results showed that their analytical method was useful for identifying the link between breathing and heartbeat in this population. Findings revealed that cardiorespiratory interaction steadily increased with each infants postnatal age. Surprisingly, researchers found no correlation between cardiorespiratory interaction and either birth weight or gestational age at birth, two factors often used to gauge infant maturity. The degree of cardiorespiratory interaction increased over time before the attending physicians decision to discharge each baby from the hospital without respiratory support or cardiorespiratory monitoring, suggesting that each infants brainstema critical structure that controls many functions vital to lifewas maturing over time.

Importance of the Findings These findings suggest that by coupling individual breaths to heartbeats, the researchers were able to avoid the pitfalls of earlier methods. The analytical method used by this research team could be useful for monitoring whether premature infants have developed enough to head home from the hospital without complications.

Since coupling of organs is correlated with good health, continuously measuring cardiorespiratory interaction may provide early detection of subacute, potentially catastrophic illness. Future studies should test the hypothesis that falling cardiorespiratory interaction precedes clinically evident deterioration, the authors say.

Study Team The study was conducted by Matthew T. Clark, and John L. Hudson of the University of Virginia; Craig G. Rusin, Brooke D. Vergales, Alix Paget-Brown, John Kattwinkel, Douglas E. Lake, and J. Randall Moorman of the University of Virginia Health System; and Hoshik Lee and John B. Delos of the College of William and Mary.

The work was supported by an NICHD GO (Grand Opportunities) Grant.

### NOTE TO EDITORS: The article is available online at http://bit.ly/yLip88. For additional information please contact Donna Krupa at dkrupa@the-aps.org, @Phyziochick, or 301.634.7209. *** Physiology is the study of how molecules, cells, tissues and organs function to create health or disease. The American Physiological Society (APS; http://www.the-APS.org/press) has been an integral part of the discovery process for 125 years. To keep up with the science, follow @Phyziochick on Twitter.

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New Analysis Could Give Cues About When to Move Infants From NICU

Physical Therapist Technician:

Seeking a full-time, experienced Physical Therapist Technician for our progressive, employee centered outpatient clinic located in Marana, AZ. We are also looking to hire per diem Physical Therapist Technicians for all four of our locations in Tucson. Your impact on our organization will be significant in providing support services for our clinicians and extraordinary customer service for our patients. This is an opportunity to stretch and improve your skills.
Responsibilities include: Instructing patients in therapist directed programs, and performing other front office/ physical therapy duties accurately and efficiently. Displaying a professional, courteous, and positive attitude when performing job duties and having the ability to work in a team environment. Our company takes pride in its ability to provide the highest level of customer service. We are looking for a new team member who will aim to ensure that all patients receive the greatest quality of treatment and care.
Qualifications: high school diploma or equivalent; basic typing, English and Math skills; computer proficiency and a minimum of two years of experience with a medical or therapy practice. Bilingual English/Spanish is a plus. Customer service experience required.
Benefits for full time employees include: medical insurance, 401(k) plan, profit sharing, holiday pay and PTO
Please email mail your resumes to resumes@mipts.com

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Fulbright Information Session:

Are you interested in spending a year abroad – taking classes, performing a research project, or teaching English – after you graduate?
Then you should consider applying for the Fulbright Program for U.S. Students. The Fulbright is one of the most prestigious awards available for U.S. students. It is open to individuals from any discipline. The award supports a year in one of over 130countries, during which you can take classes, carry out a research project, or serve as an English Teaching Assistant.
Find out more at the:
Fulbright Program for U.S. Students Information Session
Thursday, March 29 @ 3:30pm
Chavez Building, Room 301, The University of Arizona Campus, Room 301
Open to the entire UA community
Please RSVP to Jeff Thibert, Scholarship Advisor in the Office of Nationally Competitive Scholarships (ONCS) at the UA Honors College, at thibert@email.arizona.edu. Also, be sure to tell Jeff if you can’t attend but would like more information. You can also read more about the Fulbright Program at http://us.fulbrightonline.org/.

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Huffines Discussion fostering healthy dialogue through event

Dr. Noah Dean delivers his speech, Avoiding Gimmicks in Health and Fitness, Friday at the Huffines Discussion at Rudder Theatre.

People are often told that the key to a successful performance is focusing, but the real stickler is focusing on the right thing, said Jacques Dallaire, an exercise physiology expert who works with professional athletes and entertainers who want to be the best in their business.

"The issue is not focusing harder," he said. "It's focusing correctly."

Dallaire was one of eight speakers Friday at the second annual Huffines Discussion who gave 15-minute presentations on their expertise in the field of sports medicine.

The event was organized by the Texas A&M Huffines Institute for Sports Medicine and Human Performance, a group aiming to connect exercise scientists, practitioners and the public in hopes of increasing health.

Giving an example of when focusing can be used the wrong way, Dallaire pointed to basketball players who miss shots because they're thinking about the previous shot they missed.

"If you want the results to be as good as possible, stop thinking about the results," he said. "Be the boss of your own mind. Choose to exercise that control and direct your focus correctly."

Topics weren't just limited to sports and sports medicine, but appealed to anyone with a general interest in health or fitness and were meant to help people in their everyday lives, said Tim Lightfoot, a professor of kinesiology and institute director.

Wendy Kohrt, a professor of medicine at the University of Colorado, gave advice about keeping bones strong to prevent osteoporosis -- a condition typically diagnosed in older people who have lost bone density, causing their bones to become weak and easily fractured.

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Huffines Discussion fostering healthy dialogue through event

Huffines Institute fostering healthy dialogue through event

Dr. Noah Dean delivers his speech, Avoiding Gimmicks in Health and Fitness, Friday at the Huffines Discussion at Rudder Theatre.

People are often told that the key to a successful performance is focusing, but the real stickler is focusing on the right thing, said Jacques Dallaire, an exercise physiology expert who works with professional athletes and entertainers who want to be the best in their business.

"The issue is not focusing harder," he said. "It's focusing correctly."

Dallaire was one of eight speakers Friday at the second annual Huffines Discussion who gave 15-minute presentations on their expertise in the field of sports medicine.

The event was organized by the Texas A&M Huffines Institute for Sports Medicine and Human Performance, a group aiming to connect exercise scientists, practitioners and the public in hopes of increasing health.

Giving an example of when focusing can be used the wrong way, Dallaire pointed to basketball players who miss shots because they're thinking about the previous shot they missed.

"If you want the results to be as good as possible, stop thinking about the results," he said. "Be the boss of your own mind. Choose to exercise that control and direct your focus correctly."

Topics weren't just limited to sports and sports medicine, but appealed to anyone with a general interest in health or fitness and were meant to help people in their everyday lives, said Tim Lightfoot, a professor of kinesiology and institute director.

Wendy Kohrt, a professor of medicine at the University of Colorado, gave advice about keeping bones strong to prevent osteoporosis -- a condition typically diagnosed in older people who have lost bone density, causing their bones to become weak and easily fractured.

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Huffines Institute fostering healthy dialogue through event

Exercise Has Benefits, Even When It’s Done in Space

Astronauts living on the International Space Station show small effect on cardiovascular health when accompanied by an exercise regimen

Article published in the Journal of Applied Physiology

Newswise BETHESDA, Md. (March 22, 2012)Astronauts have been taking part in short spaceflight missions since 1961. They have only recently begun to spend significantly longer times in space, with missions extending for months, since the days of the Russian Mir space station (1986-2001) and extended stays on the International Space Station (ISS; November 2000). Though earlier studies clearly showed that astronauts on these extended missions suffered serious deficits from lengthy times in a low-gravity environment, including dizziness when standing up, considerable loss of bone mass, and impaired muscle function, little was known about the effects of long-term space flight on the heart and vascular system. In a new study, a research team has tested various cardiovascular measures in six astronauts on long-term missions aboard the International Space Station. These findings show that lengthy spaceflight indeed affects cardiovascular responses, but not as dramatically as the researchers predicted, suggesting that the intensive exercise routines astronauts on these long missions complete every day are doing their job.

The article is entitled Cardiovascular Regulation During Long-Duration Spaceflights to the International Space Station. It appears in the current edition of the Journal of Applied Physiology, published by the American Physiological Society.

Methodology The researchers collected data from six male astronauts, between 41 and 55 years old, who were headed to the ISS on missions ranging from 52 to 199 days. At about a month before they embarked, the research team collected a wealth of data on each subjects cardiovascular health. This data was collected during spontaneous and paced breathing, both sitting up and lying down, to reflect a variety of conditions and cardiovascular stresses. The researchers measured various factors including finger arterial blood pressure, heart rate, left ventricular ejection time, and cardiac output. The astronauts repeated these measures independently a few weeks after they arrived at the space station, then a few weeks before they returned to Earth. A final assessment took place again soon after landing on Earth.

Results Results showed that heart rate, blood pressure, and arterial baroreflex response (the bodys natural way to regulate heart rate and blood pressure based on continuous sensing of both) were unchanged from pre-flight to in-flight. Left ventricular ejection times and cardiac output both increased in-flight, while time between heartbeats, arterial pulse pressure, and the blood pumped from the heart decreased. In the post-flight testing compared to pre-flight measures, heart rate and cardiac output increased slightly, while arterial baroreflex response decreased by about a third, but only in the seated position.

Importance of the Findings These findings suggest that long-duration spaceflight has significant effects on cardiovascular function, yet these effects are relatively small. The researchers attribute this cardiovascular stability to the intensive exercise program astronauts commit to while on lengthy spaceflight missions. On these particular missions, the six astronauts were each allotted 2.5 hours per day to set up for exercise, complete a workout, and clean up after the session, with options to exercise on a cycle, treadmill, or doing resistance training. These exercise sessions appear to keep astronauts relatively healthy and prepared for return to Earth, despite the potentially negative effects of a low-gravity environment.

These post-flight changes were somewhat less than expected based on short-duration flights and early reports of long-duration missions and suggest that the current countermeasures on the ISS, which include exercise training, are keeping cardiovascular control mechanisms well prepared for return to Earth, the authors say.

The ISS astronauts in the current study represent the first six-person crew, signifying the transition to greater possibilities to conduct science on this major international laboratory, they note.

Study Team The study was conducted by R. L. Hughson, D. K. Greaves, P. P. Pereira-Junior, and D. Xu of the University of Waterloo; J.K. Shoemaker of the University of Western Ontario; A. P. Blaber of Simon Fraser University; and P. Arbeille of CERCOM, EFMP CHU Trousseau.

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Exercise Has Benefits, Even When It's Done in Space

Nemours researchers uncover new evidence of cancer-causing agent present in gaseous phase of cigarette smoke

Public release date: 21-Mar-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: Karen Bengston kbengsto@nemours.org 302-298-7319 Nemours

Wilmington, DE A team of researchers led by A. K. Rajasekaran, PhD, Director of the Nemours Center for Childhood Cancer Research, has shown that a key protein involved in cell function and regulation is stopped by a substance present in cigarette smoke. Their work is published online in the American Journal of Physiology - Lung Cell and Molecular Physiology.

Cigarette smoke is well recognized as a cause of lung cancer and is associated with many other forms of cancer in adults. Cigarette smoke has more than 4,000 components, many of which are linked to the development and progression of lung cancer. Evidence has shown secondhand smoke to be as dangerous as primary smoke due to its impact on the cells of the body.

In the study, the authors found a cancer-causing agent called reactive oxygen species (ROS) present in the gaseous phase of cigarette smoke that has the ability to inhibit normal cell function. Exposure to the secondhand smoke produced by as little as two cigarettes was found to almost completely stop the function of a cell's sodium pump within a few hours. In normal cells, the sodium pump plays a critical role transporting potassium into the cell and sodium out of the cell. The competence of the cell's sodium pump, i.e., its inability to regulate sodium, is predictive of cell damage, disease progression and ultimately, survival.

"This is critical information with regard to secondhand smoke," said Dr. Rajasekaran. "We now know that one need not inhale the particulate matter present in secondhand smoke to suffer the consequence of smoking. Exposure to the gaseous substance alone, which you breathe while standing near a smoker, is sufficient to cause harm." Dr. Lee Goodglick, Associate Professor in the Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine, UCLA, and co-senior author of the study, noted, "Few reliable lung cancer biomarkers that could predict survival, treatment options or response to therapy exist today. Even fewer have been recognized where the function of the biomarker is known, yielding important information about the mechanism of action. This study really accomplishes both."

This research is the latest finding in the compendium of evidence that supports protecting children from exposure to cigarette smoke. Excessive exposure to cigarette smoke during childhood can facilitate lung cancer development as children grow into adults. While more research is needed to understand the consequences of sodium pump inhibition by cigarette smoke, this study reveals that secondhand smoke is even more dangerous than previously thought.

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About the Nemours Center for Childhood Cancer Research

The Nemours Center for Childhood Cancer Research, part of Nemours Biomedical Research at the Alfred I. duPont Hospital for Children, is located in a fully renovated laboratory space on Rockland Road in Wilmington, DE. The goal of the center is to evolve into a leader in research focusing on the discovery of new drugs and biomarkers for childhood cancers and reduced side effects arising due to cancer treatment in children. The NCCCR works closely with the University of Delaware, Christiana Care - Helen F. Graham Cancer Center, the Delaware Biotechnology Institute and Thomas Jefferson University. For more information, visit http://www.nemours.org/link/ncccr.

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Nemours researchers uncover new evidence of cancer-causing agent present in gaseous phase of cigarette smoke

Evaluating Sex Differences in Medical Device Clinical Trials: Time for Action [Viewpoint]

Sanket S. Dhruva, MD; Rita F. Redberg, MD, MSc Author Affiliations: Department of Medicine (Dr Dhruva), and Women's Cardiovascular Services, School of Medicine, Division of Cardiology (Dr Redberg), University of California, San Francisco. Dr Redberg is also Editor, Archives of Internal Medicine.

The safety and effectiveness of medical treatments can differ in men and women for many reasons related to different epidemiologic characteristics, physiology, and body size. In general, women have higher bleeding rates and procedural morbidity and mortality than men, which means that their risk/benefit ratios for many implanted medical devices can differ from men. Therefore, sex-specific safety and effectiveness data are necessary for informed patient decision making. In 2008, the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA) convened 2 workshops on this topic that included multiple stakeholderspatient groups, medical device industry representatives, academia, and government officials. In December 2011, the FDA released a draft guidance informed by these workshops, entitled Evaluation of Sex Differences in Medical Device Clinical Studies.1 This document discusses the underrepresentation of women in medical device clinical trials and provides recommendations for increasing enrollment of women and performing sex-specific analyses. A 90-day public comment period began on

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Evaluating Sex Differences in Medical Device Clinical Trials: Time for Action [Viewpoint]

iWorx Introduces High Performance Data Acquisition System with Analytical Software for OEM Applications

DOVER, N.H.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--

iWorx, a developer of advanced physiology research tools, has introduced the IX-404E Data Acquisition System for OEM applications that require data recording and analysis. The cost-effective, high performance system features four single-ended analog inputs and a 16 bit analog-to-digital converter. The system is capable of sampling at up to 10 k/s/s per channel on each of its 4 channels and can be easily embedded into a variety of biomedical and analytical devices.

The IX-404E system is controlled by iWorx LabScribe2 Recording and Analysis Software which is included with the system. LabScribe2 software features an intuitive, user-friendly interface for setting up acquisition screens, calibrating signals and analyzing data. A comprehensive set of analytical routines have been preconfigured making data analysis and interpretation quick and easy. LabScribe2 software also includes a scripting function for creating custom analytical routines.

More information on iWorx IX-404E Data Acquisition System can be found at http://www.iworx.com. Contact iWorx Systems, Inc., 62 Littleworth Road, Dover, NH 03820 (T) (800) 234-1757, (F) (603) 742-2455, billm@iworx.com.

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About iWorx

iWorx advanced research solutions include high performance recording hardware, software, and components that accelerate metabolic, cardiovascular, neuromuscular and respiratory physiology research. In addition to data acquisition systems, iWorx offers a full selection of signal conditioners, stimulators, transducers, electrodes, cables, and general-purpose laboratory equipment and accessories.

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iWorx Introduces High Performance Data Acquisition System with Analytical Software for OEM Applications

American Physiological Society’s 125th Anniversary Meeting Puts Additional Symposia in the Spotlight at Experimental …

Newswise BETHESDA, Md. (March 19, 2012)At Experimental Biology 2012 (EB 2012), being held April 21-25 at the San Diego Convention Center, the American Physiological Society (APS) will mark its 125th anniversary and host more than 2,600 abstract presentations and a variety of symposia. Topics include:

Physiology in Medicine: Physiology of Obesity, Cardiometabolic Disease, and Therapeutic Weight Loss: Obesity and its consequences for cardiovascular and metabolic health are becoming one of the worlds most important health challenges. Therapeutic approaches to obesity remain limited. Four presentations at this symposium will address the pathophysiology of obesity-induced cardiometabolic diseases, the impact of maternal obesity on fetal programming, recent advances in central nervous system mechanisms that regulate energy balance, and the complex physiology of therapeutic weight loss. http://bit.ly/xOZqIm (Sun., 4/22)

A Complex Interplay Coming Together to Build the Heart: The heart is the first active organ during development. Researchers believe they can only fully understand how the heart is built by integrating the areas of genetics, electrophysiology, and molecular and cellular levels. This symposium will bring together critical areas of heart research that reflect the synergistic effects of these components in the formation and function of this essential organ. http://bit.ly/zU2Zd6 (Sun., 4/22)

Systems Biology of Cardiovascular Genomes and Proteomes: Within the last decade there has been a revolution in the technical ability to explore genomes and their products in the lab. These advances, including next-generation sequencing, proteomics and systems biology, are thus changing the manner in which we study complex human diseases. This symposium will focus the spotlight on advances made in the study of cardiac and vascular disease, with the emphasis on how new insights into genomes and proteomes have transformed basic and translational research. http://bit.ly/xzNhbx (Sun., 4/22)

Mechanobiology in the Lungs: Being a mechanically dynamic organ, the lung and its cells are subjected to varied types of physical forces. For example, lung endothelial cells endure shear stress due to fluid flow while epithelial cells lining the airways and air sacs (also called alveoli) are exposed to tensile and compressive forces during the respiratory cycle. It has become increasingly apparent that most cells throughout the body sense their mechanical environment and respond to changes. Although there are significant changes in lung mechanics during mechanical ventilation and airway diseases, little is known about how such changes affect cellular functions in the lung. This symposium will feature discussions that focus on recent findings on how lung cells sense mechanical forces and convert mechanical signals into biological signals. http://bit.ly/wlIe4O (Mon., 4/23)

Regulation of Intestinal Stem Cells During Development, Homeostasis, Adaptation, and Pathophysiology: Stem cells in intestinal development and the mechanisms leading to the malignant transformation of these cells will guide the discussions at this symposium. The agenda offers a perspective on four aspects of intestinal stem cells: (1) development; (2) isolation and characterization during adaptation and recovery from injury; (3) presence in colon cancer and during transformation; and (4) regulation and during aging in the Drosophila. http://bit.ly/wZKliz (Wed., 4/25)

Recent Advances in Physiology and Disease: The Role of the Circadian Clock in Neural, Cardiovascular, and Metabolic Function: The circadian clock, the molecular mechanism that regulates sleep and wake rhythms, also regulates multiple physiological functions through its action on peripheral tissues outside the central nervous system. Circadian rhythm disruptions have been linked to increased risk for cancer, metabolic disorders, and cardiovascular disease. Speakers will discuss significant research advances in the understanding of how our circadian clock impacts physiology and disease, using a cross-section of expertise in both basic and translational research. http://bit.ly/zGkGoO (Wed., 4/25)

EB 2012 is also co-sponsored by the American Association of Anatomists (AAA), American Society for Biochemistry and Molecular Biology (ASBMB), American Society for Investigative Pathology (ASIP), American Society for Nutrition (ASN), and the American Society for Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics (ASPET).

Media Registration Free registration for the meeting is available to credentialed representatives of the press, who will also have access to an onsite newsroom. Detailed instructions for individuals who wish to request press passes are available on the website at http://bit.ly/xWob5G. Requests for additional information should be sent to Media@FASEB.org

The press room will be open Saturday, April 21 through Wednesday, April 25. Pre-registration for press passes is strongly encouraged and will be accepted through April 16. A press kit with highlights of scientific research will be available on an embargoed basis prior to the meeting. Follow the meeting on Twitter with hashtags #APS125 and #EB2012.

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American Physiological Society's 125th Anniversary Meeting Puts Additional Symposia in the Spotlight at Experimental ...

Poor dental hygiene puts congenital heart disease patients at risk of further heart damage

Public release date: 16-Mar-2012 [ | E-mail | Share ]

Contact: ESC Press Office press@escardio.org 33-049-294-8627 European Society of Cardiology

Copenhagen, 16 March 2012: Poor dental hygiene behaviours in patients with congenital heart disease are increasing their risk of endocarditis. Teens with congenital heart disease floss, brush and visit the dentist less than their peers. But they have healthier behaviours when it comes to alcohol, cigarettes and illicit drugs. Adults with single ventricle physiology (a type of congenital heart disease) also have poorer dental hygiene practices than their peers despite having better health behaviours overall.

The findings were presented in two studies at the 12th Annual Spring Meeting on Cardiovascular Nursing, 16-17 March, in Copenhagen, Denmark.

"Patients with congenital heart disease are diagnosed and receive their initial treatment in childhood but this does not mean that they are cured," says the supervisor of both studies, Professor Philip Moons, professor in nursing science at the University of Leuven, Belgium, and guest professor at Copenhagen University Hospital, Denmark. "They remain vulnerable for developing complications for instance we know that in patients with congenital heart disease, binge drinking can trigger life-threatening arrhythmias and good dental hygiene helps prevent endocarditis."

For the first study (FPN 34) 1, lifestyle information was collected from 429 adolescents with congenital heart disease aged 14-19 years from the longitudinal study i-DETACH (Information technology Devices and Education programme for Transitioning Adolescents with Congenital Heart disease). Of these, 401 were matched with a control of the same age and gender without congenital heart disease. All participants completed a questionnaire, developed by the research group of Professor Moons, which measures the use of alcohol, cigarettes and illicit drugs, dental care and physical activity. These behaviours are particularly important to the health of patients with congenital heart disease.

Using results from the questionnaire, the researchers calculated risk scores for 'substance use' (binge drinking; smoking; illicit drug use) and 'dental hygiene' (no dental visits; not brushing; not flossing) ranging from 0. An 'overall health risk score' (range 0) was calculated using the substance use risk score, dental hygiene risk score, and the absence of physical activity. The 3 risk scores were transformed to a scale ranging from 0 (no risk) to 100 (maximum risk). Scores were compared across different age groups.

In adolescents with congenital heart disease, substance use increased with age (p<0.001). Compared with matched controls, adolescents with congenital heart disease had significantly lower substance use (p<0.001) and health risk (p<0.001) scores, and significantly higher dental hygiene risk scores (p=0.04).

The results reveal that health risk behaviours are prevalent in adolescents with congenital heart disease and they increase with age. They also show that in general, the health behaviour of adolescents with congenital heart disease is better than their peers except for dental hygiene.

Professor Moons says: "The fact that adolescents with congenital heart disease have better health behaviour overall than the general population is understandable given the amount of input they have had from healthcare professionals over their lives. But we need to do more to understand why their dental hygiene is not as good as expected."

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Poor dental hygiene puts congenital heart disease patients at risk of further heart damage