Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 17
pro vyhledávání: '"K J, Killian"'
Publikováno v:
01.05 - Clinical respiratory physiology, exercise and functional imaging.
Autor:
H, Imaoka, G M, Gauvreau, R M, Watson, T, Strinich, G L, Obminksi, K, Howie, K J, Killian, P M, O'Byrne
Publikováno v:
Allergy. 66(8)
Allergen inhalation causes early and late bronchoconstrictor responses, airway hyperresponsiveness and airway inflammation in allergic asthmatics. The role of airway inflammatory cells in causing allergen-induced bronchoconstriction and airway hyperr
Publikováno v:
European Respiratory Journal. 4:917-925
This study quantified the separate contributions of the intensity of exercise and its duration to muscular effort and dyspnoea during cycle ergometry. Six normal subjects estimated the perceived intensity (Borg scale 0-10) of peripheral muscular effo
Autor:
K J, Killian
Publikováno v:
Clinical and investigative medicine. Medecine clinique et experimentale. 24(2)
This 55-year-old man with known rheumatic mitral valve disease is modestly disabled achieving a VO2max of 72% and a maximal power output of 76% of the predicted normal. His capacity to exercise is limited by dyspnea due to a reduction in his capacity
Autor:
K J, Killian
Publikováno v:
Monaldi archives for chest disease = Archivio Monaldi per le malattie del torace. 53(6)
Autor:
K J, Killian, N L, Jones
Publikováno v:
Clinics in chest medicine. 15(2)
To understand why someone is dyspneic during exercise, we need to follow the advice of Sir Francis Bacon: "No natural phenomenon can be adequately studied in itself alone, but to be understood must be considered as it stands connected with all of nat
Autor:
K. J. Killian
Publikováno v:
Chest. 88:84S-90
Publikováno v:
The American review of respiratory disease. 134(6)
Tension in the respiratory muscles and the subsequent intrathoracic subatmospheric pressure swing plays a role in respiratory effort sensation. However, the role of a diaphragmatic fatiguing process in the genesis of this sensation has not been exami
Publikováno v:
The American review of respiratory disease. 126(5)
We studied the perception of breathlessness as a function of air flow obstruction in 45 asthmatic subjects using a category scaling technique. Air flow obstruction and breathlessness were induced by inhalations of histamine acid phosphate in twofold-