3 resultados para oxygen consumption
em AMS Tesi di Dottorato - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
Running economy (RE), i.e. the oxygen consumption at a given submaximal speed, is an important determinant of endurance running performance. So far, investigators have widely attempted to individuate the factors affecting RE in competitive athletes, focusing mainly on the relationships between RE and running biomechanics. However, the current results are inconsistent and a clear mechanical profile of an economic runner has not been yet established. The present work aimed to better understand how the running technique influences RE in sub-elite middle-distance runners by investigating the biomechanical parameters acting on RE and the underlying mechanisms. Special emphasis was given to accounting for intra-individual variability in RE at different speeds and to assessing track running rather than treadmill running. In Study One, a factor analysis was used to reduce the 30 considered mechanical parameters to few global descriptors of the running mechanics. Then, a biomechanical comparison between economic and non economic runners and a multiple regression analysis (with RE as criterion variable and mechanical indices as independent variables) were performed. It was found that a better RE was associated to higher knee and ankle flexion in the support phase, and that the combination of seven individuated mechanical measures explains ∼72% of the variability in RE. In Study Two, a mathematical model predicting RE a priori from the rate of force production, originally developed and used in the field of comparative biology, was adapted and tested in competitive athletes. The model showed a very good fit (R2=0.86). In conclusion, the results of this dissertation suggest that the very complex interrelationships among the mechanical parameters affecting RE may be successfully dealt with through multivariate statistical analyses and the application of theoretical mathematical models. Thanks to these results, coaches are provided with useful tools to assess the biomechanical profile of their athletes. Thus, individual weaknesses in the running technique may be identified and removed, with the ultimate goal to improve RE.
Resumo:
Il lavoro svolto nel corso del mio dottorato ha avuto per oggetto lo studio dell’ inibizione della glicolisi aerobia (il principale processo metabolico utilizzato dalle cellule neoplastiche per produrre energia) ottenuta mediante il blocco dell’enzima lattato deidrogenasi (LDH). La mia attività si è concentrata sulla possibilità di utilizzare questo approccio allo scopo di migliorare l’efficacia della terapia antitumorale, valutandone gli effetti su colture di carcinoma epatocellulare umano Inizialmente, per valutare gli effetti della inibizione della LDH, è stato usato l’acido ossamico ( OXA). Questo composto è l’unico inibitore noto specifico per LDH ; è una molecola non tossica in vivo, ma attiva a concentrazioni troppo elevate per consentirne un uso terapeutico. Un importante risultato ottenuto è stata la dimostrazione che l’ inibizione della LDH ottenuta con OXA non è solo in grado di innescare una risposta di morte nelle cellule trattate, ma, associata alla somministrazione di sorafenib, aumenta fortemente l’efficacia di questo farmaco, determinando un effetto di sinergismo. Questo forte effetto di potenziamento dell’azione del farmaco è stato spiegato con la dimostrazione che il sorafenib ha la capacità di inibire il consumo di ossigeno delle cellule trattate, rendendole più dipendenti dalla glicolisi. Grazie alla collaborazione con il Dipartimento di Scienze Farmaceutiche il nostro gruppo di ricerca è arrivato alla identificazione di un composto (galloflavina) che inibisce la LDH con una efficienza molto maggiore di OXA. I risultati preliminari ottenuti sulle cellule di epatocarcinoma suggeriscono che la galloflavina potrebbe essere un composto promettente nel campo degli inibitori metabolici tumorali e inducono a una sua valutazione più approfondita come potenziale farmaco antineoplastico.
Resumo:
The thesis analyze a subject of renewed interest in bioengineering, the research and analysis of exercise parameters that maximize the neuromuscular and cardiovascular involvement in vibration treatment. The research activity was inspired by the increasing use of device able to provide localized or whole body vibration (WBV). In particular, the focus was placed on the vibrating platform and the effect that the vibrations have on the neuromuscular system and cardiovascular system. The aim of the thesis is to evaluate the effectiveness and efficiency of vibration applied to the entire body, in particular, it was investigated the effect of WBV on: 1) Oxygen consumption during static and dynamic squat; 2) Resonant frequency of the muscle groups of the lower limbs; 3) Oxygen consumption and electromyographic signals during static and dynamic squat. In the first three chapters are explained the state of the art concerning vibration treatments, the effects of vibration applied to the entire body, with the explanation of the basic mechanisms (Tonic Vibration Reflex, TVR) and the neuromuscular system, with particular attention to the skeletal muscles and the stretch reflex. In the fourth chapter is illustrated the set-up used for the experiments and the software, implemented in LabWindows in order to control the platform and acquire the electromyographic signal. In the fifth chapter were exposed experiments undertaken during the PhD years. In particular, the analysis of Whole Body Vibration effect on neurological and cardiovascular systems showed interesting results. The results indicate that the static squat with WBV produced higher neuromuscular and cardiorespiratory system activation for exercise duration <60 sec. Otherwise, if the single bout duration was higher than 60 sec, the greater cardiorespiratory system activation was achieved during the dynamic squat with WBV while higher neuromuscular activation was still obtained with the static exercise.