1. AMPD1 genotypes and exercise capacity in McArdle patients.
- Author
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Rubio JC, Pérez M, Maté-Muñoz JL, García-Consuegra I, Chamorro-Viña C, Fernández del Valle M, Andreu AL, Martín MA, Arenas J, and Lucia A
- Subjects
- Adult, Alleles, Ammonia blood, Ergometry, Female, Genotype, Glycogen Storage Disease Type V genetics, Heterozygote, Humans, Male, Oxygen Consumption physiology, Pulmonary Ventilation physiology, Sex Factors, AMP Deaminase genetics, Exercise Tolerance genetics, Exercise Tolerance physiology, Glycogen Storage Disease Type V physiopathology
- Abstract
The purpose of this study was to assess if there exists an association between C34T muscle adenosine monophosphate deaminase ( AMPD1) genotypes (i.e., normal homyzygotes [CC] vs. heterozygotes [ CT]) and directly measured indices of exercise capacity (peak oxygen uptake [VO(2peak)], ventilatory threshold [VT], gross mechanical efficiency [GE], etc.) in 44 Caucasian McArdle patients (23 males, 21 females). All patients performed a graded cycle ergometer test until exhaustion (for VO(2peak) and VT determination) and a 12-min constant-load test at the power output eliciting the VT (for GE determination). We found no significant difference in indices of exercise capacity between CC (n = 18) and CT genotypes (n = 5) in the group of male patients (p > 0.05). In contrast, the VO(2) at the VT was significantly lower (p < 0.05) in CT (n = 4; 7.9 +/- 0.4 ml/kg/min) than in CC female patients (n = 17; 11.0 +/- 0.9 ml/kg/min). In summary, heterozigosity for the C34T allele of the AMPD gene is associated with reduced submaximal aerobic capacity in female patients with McArdle disease and might partly account, in this gender, for the variability that exists in the phenotypic manifestation of the disease.
- Published
- 2008
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