11 results on '"I., Casoni"'
Search Results
2. [Hematological variables in marathon and ultramarathon runners].
- Author
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Casoni I, Borsetto C, Droghetti P, Moretti M, Cavicchi A, and Reverberi R
- Subjects
- Adult, Hematocrit, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Physical Education and Training, Hemoglobins analysis, Iron blood, Running, Sports Medicine
- Abstract
The haemoglobin concentration of runners has been reported to be often below normal (1). In the present investigation the haemoglobin and iron concentrations and the haematocrit have been determined in 45 marathon runners examined before and after the 1982 Italian Marathon Championship and in 79 runners examined before and after the 1982 Firenze-Faenza race (107 km). The results obtained suggest that the training programs followed by the marathon runners (up to 260 km per week in the months preceding the race) are accompanied by a significant decrease of the haemoglobin and iron levels and of the haematocrit. Similar results have been observed in the participants to the Firenze-Faenza race. Nevertheless in these ultramarathoners the decrease of the haemoglobin and iron concentration and of the haematocrit are less marked, possibly because their training programs are less intense than those of the marathon runners. The findings obtained are in favour of the hypothesis that the degree of "sport anaemia" might be related to the amount of training of the athletes.
- Published
- 1983
3. Unmodified performance in runners following anabolic steroid administration.
- Author
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Ballarin E, Guglielmini C, Martinelli S, Casoni I, Borsetto C, Ziglio PG, and Conconi F
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Double-Blind Method, Follicle Stimulating Hormone blood, Heart Rate drug effects, Humans, Luteinizing Hormone blood, Male, Pituitary Gland drug effects, Stanozolol pharmacology, Testis drug effects, Testosterone blood, Anabolic Agents pharmacology, Energy Metabolism drug effects, Running
- Abstract
The effect of a low-dose treatment (10 mg/day) of stanozolol on the anaerobic threshold (AT) and on maximal velocity (Vmax) was studied in ten well-trained runners in a 6-week trial experiment. The serum levels of testosterone (T), interstitial cell-stimulating hormone (ICSH), and of follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) were determined before, during, and after the steroid administration. No improvements of AT and Vmax were found. No improvement of the competition running times was observed during the experimental period. The ICSH and FSH serum concentrations did not change significantly, while a marked decrease of the T serum concentration was observed. It is concluded that a low-dose treatment of stanozolol, sufficient to depress the testicular function, does not improve athletic performance.
- Published
- 1986
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. A field test for determining the speed obtained through anaerobic glycolysis in runners.
- Author
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Borsetto C, Ballarin E, Casoni I, Cellini M, Vitiello P, and Conconi F
- Subjects
- Adolescent, Adult, Humans, Lactates blood, Lactic Acid, Male, Methods, Physical Fitness, Anaerobic Threshold, Glycolysis physiology, Running
- Abstract
A field test for the evaluation of the speed generated by the anaerobic lactacid mechanism has been developed in runners. The test consists of 1200 m of continuous running: in the first 1000 m the speed corresponding to the anaerobic threshold is progressively reached; in the last 200 m an all-out sprint is performed. The speed at the anaerobic threshold is subtracted from the speed reached in the final 200-m all-out sprint. In 39 runners examined (marathon runners, n = 13; 5000-10000-m runners, n = 10; 400-800-m runners, n = 7; sprinters, n = 9), the additional speed generated above the anaerobic threshold was correlated with the venous blood lactate concentration reached 5 min after the all-out effort (r = 0.93). The anaerobic speeds measured by the test were in keeping with the characteristics of the runners under study, i.e., anaerobic speeds were highest for the sprinters, intermediate for the middle-distance runners, and lowest for the marathon runners. Since the speed generated above the anaerobic threshold by the aerobic fuel breakdown can be subtracted, the contribution of creatine phosphate is minimal, and the speed exceeding the anaerobic threshold is highly correlated with lactate accumulation, the present test should measure the speed generated by anaerobic glycolysis.
- Published
- 1989
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Reduced hemoglobin concentration and red cell hemoglobinization in Italian marathon and ultramarathon runners.
- Author
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Casoni I, Borsetto C, Cavicchi A, Martinelli S, and Conconi F
- Subjects
- Adult, Erythrocyte Count, Ferritins blood, Haptoglobins analysis, Humans, Male, Physical Education and Training, Physical Endurance, Erythrocyte Indices, Hemoglobins analysis, Iron blood, Physical Exertion, Running
- Abstract
Red blood cell indices, serum iron, and serum ferritin concentration were determined in 45 marathon runners, 56 ultramarathon runners, and 32 healthy sedentary controls. A significant reduction of hemoglobin concentration, hematocrit, mean corpuscular hemoglobin, mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration, mean corpuscular volume, serum iron, and serum ferritin were found in marathon runners compared to control subjects. The same variables were also reduced, but to a lesser extent, in the less trained ultramarathon runners. The decreased hemoglobin concentration demonstrated in the runners examined is related to both a reduced mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration and a reduced hematocrit and may depend on a reduction of the body iron stores.
- Published
- 1985
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Could the enzymuria of long distance runners suggest renal tubular injury?
- Author
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de Paoli Vitali E, Gilli P, Farinelli A, Nunzi L, Braga D, and Casoni I
- Subjects
- Humans, Acetylglucosaminidase urine, Acute Kidney Injury etiology, Hexosaminidases urine, Kidney Tubules injuries, Running, gamma-Glutamyltransferase urine
- Published
- 1985
7. Changes of Magnesium Concentrations in Endurance Athletes
- Author
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I. Casoni, L. Graziano, C. Guglielmini, M. G. Reali, Vincenzo Abbasciano, and Mazzotta D
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Anaerobic Threshold ,chemistry.chemical_element ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Physical exercise ,Running ,Endurance training ,Internal medicine ,Statistical significance ,medicine ,Humans ,Magnesium ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Exercise physiology ,Exercise ,biology ,Chemistry ,Athletes ,biology.organism_classification ,Surgery ,Endocrinology ,Sedentary group ,Physical Endurance ,Anaerobic exercise ,Sports - Abstract
Erythrocitary and serum magnesium (Mg) were determined in a group of 11 well-trained athletes before and after a 25-km running race, and in a group of 30 sedentary controls. The significant increase of mean erythrocitary Mg (EMg) concentration observed in the athletes after physical strain (2.58 +/- 0.34 mEq/l before, 3.10 +/- 0.45 mEq/l after the race: significance level = 5%) leads to the assumption that the possible Mg uptake is effected by the red blood cell to enhance some enzymatic reactions. The decrease of mean serum Mg concentration observed in the same subjects after the effort (1.70 +/- 0.14 mEq/l before, 1.64 +/- 0.15 mEq/l after the race) is not significant. The difference between mean Mg concentrations observed in the athletes' group before the race and in the sedentary group (EMg: 2.58 +/- 0.34 mEq/l in athletes, 3.67 +/- 0.38 mEq/l in sedentaries, significance level = 1%; serum Mg: 1.70 +/- 0.14 mEq/l in athletes, 1.96 +/- 0.15 mEq/l in sedentaries, significance level = 1%) suggests that athletes suffer from a Mg deficiency, partially due to physical exercise. The two hypotheses and the possible causes of the observed phenomena are discussed.
- Published
- 1990
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. The Conconi test: methodology after 12 years of application
- Author
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M. Patracchini, Gianni Mazzoni, E. Ballarin, I. Casoni, Fabio Manfredini, Giovanni Grazzi, C. Borsetto, C. Guglielmini, and Francesco Conconi
- Subjects
Adult ,Heart rate break-point ,Adolescent ,Anaerobic Threshold ,Extrapolation ,Incremental exercise ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Walking ,NO ,Running ,Heart Rate ,Skiing ,Heart rate ,Statistics ,Aerobic exercise ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Exercise physiology ,Child ,Exercise ,Swimming ,Mathematics ,Test method ,Bicycling ,Exercise intensity/heart rate relationship ,Skating ,Exercise intensity ,Exercise Test ,Anaerobic exercise ,Anaerobic threshold, Exercise intensity/heart rate relationship, Heart rate break-point, Incremental exercise - Abstract
The protocol for the determination of the speed/heart rate relationship during incremental exercise previously described (so-called Conconi test) has been refined and in part modified during 12 years of application. The new protocol calls for time-based increments in exercise intensity that are uniform up to submaximal speeds and progressively greater in the final phase. As in the original article (18), the speed/heart rate relationship is linear at low to moderate speed and curvilinear from submaximal to maximal speeds. A method is presented for the mathematical definition of this relationship, with the calculation of the straight-line equation of the linear phase and the identification of the point of transition from the linear to the curvilinear phase (deflection point or heart rate break-point). Analysis of 300 tests selected at random from those in our data base (more than 5,000 tests) has enabled us to show that the speed at which the deflection point occurs is significantly lower (p < 0.001) than that at which the acceleration of the final phase begins. This fact demonstrates that the break-point is not brought on by the final acceleration called for in the test protocol. Analysis of the speed/heart rate relationship allows for the determination of the following additional functional indices: 1) maximal heart rate (in 21 athletes the maximal heart rate attained in the test and that attained while racing were equal); 2) range of heart beats defining the linear part of the speed/heart rate relationship; 3) range of heart beats from the deflection point to maximal heart rate; and 4) maximal aerobic exercise intensity, obtained through extrapolation of the straight-line equation to maximal heart rate. Data are provided on the conditions of the test subject that modify his speed/heart rate relationship, such as incomplete recovery from previous efforts, inadequate warm-up, or inadequate test procedure with too rapid increments in exercise intensity. Finally, criteria for test acceptability are presented.
- Published
- 1996
9. Could the enzymuria of long distance runners suggest renal tubular injury?
- Author
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E, de Paoli Vitali, P, Gilli, A, Farinelli, L, Nunzi, D, Braga, and I, Casoni
- Subjects
Hexosaminidases ,Kidney Tubules ,Acetylglucosaminidase ,Humans ,gamma-Glutamyltransferase ,Acute Kidney Injury ,Running - Published
- 1985
10. Reduced hemoglobin concentration and red cell hemoglobinization in Italian marathon and ultramarathon runners
- Author
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S. Martinelli, A. Cavicchi, I. Casoni, F. Conconi, and C. Borsetto
- Subjects
Adult ,Erythrocyte Indices ,Male ,congenital, hereditary, and neonatal diseases and abnormalities ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Iron ,Physical Exertion ,Mean corpuscular hemoglobin ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Hematocrit ,Running ,Hemoglobins ,hemic and lymphatic diseases ,Internal medicine ,Medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Mean corpuscular volume ,Red blood cell indices ,Physical Education and Training ,biology ,Mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Haptoglobins ,business.industry ,Surgery ,Ferritin ,Endocrinology ,Ferritins ,biology.protein ,Serum iron ,Erythrocyte Count ,Physical Endurance ,Hemoglobin ,business ,human activities ,circulatory and respiratory physiology - Abstract
Red blood cell indices, serum iron, and serum ferritin concentration were determined in 45 marathon runners, 56 ultramarathon runners, and 32 healthy sedentary controls. A significant reduction of hemoglobin concentration, hematocrit, mean corpuscular hemoglobin, mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration, mean corpuscular volume, serum iron, and serum ferritin were found in marathon runners compared to control subjects. The same variables were also reduced, but to a lesser extent, in the less trained ultramarathon runners. The decreased hemoglobin concentration demonstrated in the runners examined is related to both a reduced mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration and a reduced hematocrit and may depend on a reduction of the body iron stores.
- Published
- 1985
11. Reduction of erythrocyte magnesium concentration in heterozygote beta-thalassaemic subjects and in normal subjects submitted to physical stress
- Author
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V, Abbasciano, F, Levato, M G, Reali, I, Casoni, M, Patracchini, D, Mazzotta, F, Fagioli, and C, Guglielmini
- Subjects
Adult ,Male ,Erythrocytes ,Adolescent ,Physical Exertion ,Humans ,Thalassemia ,Female ,Magnesium ,Running - Abstract
Erythrocyte and serum magnesium (Mg) concentrations have been assayed in a group of sedentary heterozygote beta-thalassaemic subjects (beta-thal), in a group of non-thalassaemic well trained runners before and after a 25 km running race, and in a group of sedentary healthy controls. The mean erythrocyte Mg concentration (EMg) found in beta-thal (2.72 mEq/litre) and in runners, both before and after the race (2.58 mEq/litre before, 3.10 after), was significantly lower than the EMg values from the control group (3.69 mEq/litre). We propose various hypotheses to explain the reductions observed.
- Published
- 1988
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