@article{CasselBaurHirschmuelleretal.2015, author = {Cassel, Michael and Baur, Heiner and Hirschmueller, Anja and Carlsohn, Anja and Fr{\"o}hlich, Katja and Mayer, Frank}, title = {Prevalence of Achilles and patellar tendinopathy and their association to intratendinous changes in adolescent athletes}, series = {Scandinavian journal of medicine \& science in sports}, volume = {25}, journal = {Scandinavian journal of medicine \& science in sports}, number = {3}, publisher = {Wiley-Blackwell}, address = {Hoboken}, issn = {0905-7188}, doi = {10.1111/sms.12318}, pages = {e310 -- e318}, year = {2015}, abstract = {Achilles (AT) and patellar tendons (PT) are commonly affected by tendinopathy in adult athletes but prevalence of symptoms and morphological changes in adolescents is unclear. The study aimed to determine prevalence of tendinopathy and intratendinous changes in ATs and PTs of adolescent athletes. A total of 760 adolescent athletes (13.0 +/- 1.9 years; 160 +/- 13cm; 50 +/- 14kg) were examined. History, local clinical examination, and longitudinal Doppler ultrasound analysis for both ATs and PTs were performed including identification of intratendinous echoic changes and vascularization. Diagnosis of tendinopathy was complied clinically in case of positive history of tendon pain and tendon pain on palpation. Achilles tendinopathy was diagnosed in 1.8\% and patellar tendinopathy in 5.8\%. Vascularizations were visible in 3.0\% of ATs and 11.4\% of PTs, hypoechogenicities in 0.7\% and 3.2\% as well as hyperechogenicities in 0\% and 0.3\%, respectively. Vascularizations and hypoechogenicities were statistically significantly more often in males than in females (P0.02). Subjects with patellar tendinopathy had higher prevalence of structural intratendinous changes than those without PT symptoms (P0.001). In adolescent athletes, patellar tendinopathy is three times more frequent compared with Achilles tendinopathy. Longitudinal studies are necessary to investigate physiological or pathological origin of vascularizations and its predictive value in development of tendinopathy.}, language = {en} } @article{ZabalzavanDongenFroehlichetal.2009, author = {Zabalza, Ana and van Dongen, Joost T. and Fr{\"o}hlich, Anja and Oliver, Sandra N. and Faix, Benjamin and Gupta, Kapuganti Jagadis and Schmalzlin, Elmar and Igal, Maria and Orcaray, Luis and Royuela, Mercedes and Geigenberger, Peter}, title = {Regulation of respiration and fermentation to control the plant internal oxygen concentration}, issn = {0032-0889}, doi = {10.1104/pp.108.129288}, year = {2009}, abstract = {Plant internal oxygen concentrations can drop well below ambient even when the plant grows under optimal conditions. Using pea (Pisum sativum) roots, we show how amenable respiration adapts to hypoxia to save oxygen when the oxygen availability decreases. The data cannot simply be explained by oxygen being limiting as substrate but indicate the existence of a regulatory mechanism, because the oxygen concentration at which the adaptive response is initiated is independent of the actual respiratory rate. Two phases can be discerned during the adaptive reaction: an initial linear decline of respiration is followed by a nonlinear inhibition in which the respiratory rate decreased progressively faster upon decreasing oxygen availability. In contrast to the cytochrome c pathway, the inhibition of the alternative oxidase pathway shows only the linear component of the adaptive response. Feeding pyruvate to the roots led to an increase of the oxygen consumption rate, which ultimately led to anoxia. The importance of balancing the in vivo pyruvate availability in the tissue was further investigated. Using various alcohol dehydrogenase knockout lines of Arabidopsis (Arabidopsis thaliana), it was shown that even under aerobic conditions, alcohol fermentation plays an important role in the control of the level of pyruvate in the tissue. Interestingly, alcohol fermentation appeared to be primarily induced by a drop in the energy status of the tissue rather than by a low oxygen concentration, indicating that sensing the energy status is an important component of optimizing plant metabolism to changes in the oxygen availability.}, language = {en} } @article{CasselCarlsohnFroehlichetal.2016, author = {Cassel, Michael and Carlsohn, Anja and Fr{\"o}hlich, Katja and John, Mareike and Riegels, N. and Mayer, Frank}, title = {Tendon Adaptation to Sport-specific Loading in Adolescent Athletes}, series = {International journal of sports medicine}, volume = {37}, journal = {International journal of sports medicine}, publisher = {Thieme}, address = {Stuttgart}, issn = {0172-4622}, doi = {10.1055/s-0035-1559772}, pages = {159 -- 164}, year = {2016}, abstract = {Tendon adaptation due to mechanical loading is controversially discussed. However, data concerning the development of tendon thickness in adolescent athletes is sparse. The purpose of this study was to examine possible differences in Achilles (AT) and patellar tendon (PT) thickness in adolescent athletes while considering age, gender and sport-specific loading. In 500 adolescent competitive athletes of 16 different sports and 40 recreational controls both ATs and PTs were sonographically measured. Subjects were divided into 2 age groups (< 13; \&\#8805; 13 years) and 6 sport type categories (ball, combat, and water sports, combined disciplines, cycling, controls). In addition, 3 risk groups (low, moderate, high) were created according to the athlete's risk of developing tendinopathy. AT and PT thickness did not significantly differ between age groups (AT/PT:<13: 5.4±0.7 mm/3.6±0.5 mm;\&\#8805;13: 5.3±0.7 mm/3.6±0.5 mm). In both age groups males presented higher tendon thickness than females (p<0.001). AT thickness was highest in ball sports/cyclists and lowest in controls (p\&\#8804;0.002). PT thickness was greatest in water sports and lowest in controls (p=0.02). High risk athletes presented slightly higher AT thickness compared to the low risk group (p=0.03). Increased AT and PT thickness in certain sport types compared to controls supports the hypothesis of structural tendon adaptation due to sport-specific loading.}, language = {en} } @article{KopinskiEngelCasseletal.2015, author = {Kopinski, Stephan and Engel, Tilman and Cassel, Michael and Fr{\"o}hlich, Katja and Mayer, Frank and Carlsohn, Anja}, title = {Ultrasound Applied to Subcutaneous Fat Tissue Measurements in International Elite Canoeists}, series = {International journal of sports medicine}, volume = {36}, journal = {International journal of sports medicine}, number = {14}, publisher = {Thieme}, address = {Stuttgart}, issn = {0172-4622}, doi = {10.1055/s-0035-1555857}, pages = {1134 -- 1141}, year = {2015}, abstract = {Subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) measurements with ultrasound have recently been introduced to assess body fat in elite athletes. However, appropriate protocols and data on various groups of athletes are missing. We investigated intra-rater reliability of SAT measurements using ultrasound in elite canoe athletes. 25 international level canoeists (18 male, 7 female; 23 +/- 4 years; 81 +/- 11 kg; 1.83 +/- 0.09 m; 20 +/- 3 training h/wk) were measured on 2 consecutive days. SAT was assessed with B-mode ultrasound at 8 sites (ISAK): triceps, subscapular, biceps, iliac crest, supraspinal, abdominal, front thigh, medial calf, and quantified using image analysis software. Data was analyzed descriptively (mean +/- SD, [range]). Coefficient of variation (CV \%), intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC, 2.1) and absolute (LoA) and ratio limits of agreement (RLoA) were calculated for day-to-day reliability. Mean sum of SAT thickness was 30.0 +/- 19.4 mm [8.0, 80.1 mm], with 3.9 +/- 1.8 mm [1.2 mm subscapular, 8.0 mm abdominal] for individual sites. CV for the sum of sites was 4.7 \%, ICC 0.99, LoA 1.7 +/- 3.6 mm, RLoA 0.940 (*/divided by 1.155). Measuring SAT with ultrasound has proved to have excellent day-to-day reliability in elite canoe athletes. Recommendations for standardization of the method will further increase accuracy and reproducibility.}, language = {en} }