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Dive into the research topics where Arnold Peckerman is active.

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Featured researches published by Arnold Peckerman.


The American Journal of the Medical Sciences | 2003

Abnormal impédance cardiography predicts symptom severity in chronic fatigue syndrome

Arnold Peckerman; Kristina Dahl; Rahul Chemitiganti; Bushra Qureishi; Benjamin H. Natelson; John LaManca

Background: Findings indicative of a problem with circulation have been reported in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). We examined this possibility by measuring the patient’s cardiac output and assessing its relation to presenting symptoms. Methods: Impedance cardiography and symptom data were collected from 38 patients with CFS grouped into cases with severe (n=18) and less severe (n=20) illness and compared with those from 27 matched, sedentary control subjects. Results: The patients with severe CFS had significantly lower stroke volume and cardiac output than the controls and less ill patients. Postexertional fatigue and flu‐like symptoms of infection differentiated the patients with severe CFS from those with less severe CFS (88.5% concordance) and were predictive (R2=0.46, P<0.0002) of lower cardiac output. In contrast, neuropsychiatric symptoms showed no specific association with cardiac output. Conclusions: These results provide a preliminary indication of reduced circulation in patients with severe CFS. Further research is needed to confirm this finding and to define its clinical implications and pathogenetic mechanisms.


Psychosomatic Medicine | 2003

Baroreceptor reflex and integrative stress responses in chronic fatigue syndrome.

Arnold Peckerman; John LaManca; Bushra Qureishi; Kristina Dahl; Roseli Golfetti; Yoshiharu Yamamoto; Benjamin H. Natelson

Objective Altered cardiovascular responses to mental and postural stressors have been reported in chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). This study examined whether those findings may involve changes in baroreceptor reflex functioning. Methods Chronotropic baroreceptor reflex (by sequential analysis) and cardiovascular stress responses were recorded during postural (5-minute of active standing) and cognitive (speech task) stress testing in patients with CFS grouped into cases with severe (N = 21) or less severe (N = 22) illness, and in 29 matched control subjects. Results Patients with CFS had a greater decline in baroreceptor reflex sensitivity (BRS) during standing, although only those with severe CFS were significantly different from the controls. Systolic blood pressure declined during standing in the control group but was maintained in the CFS patients. In contrast, the patients with less severe CFS had blunted increases in blood pressure during the speech task, which could not, however, be explained by inadequate inhibition of the baroreceptor reflex, with all groups showing an appropriate reduction in BRS during the task. Conclusions These results indicate that in CFS, deficiencies in orthostatic regulation, but not in centrally mediated stress responses, may involve the baroreceptor reflex. This study also suggests that classifying patients with CFS on illness severity may discriminate between patients with abnormalities in peripheral vs. central mechanisms of cardiovascular stress responses.


Psychosomatic Medicine | 2001

Cardiovascular responses of women with chronic fatigue syndrome to stressful cognitive testing before and after strenuous exercise.

John LaManca; Arnold Peckerman; Sue Ann Sisto; John DeLuca; Sean Cook; Benjamin H. Natelson

Objective The purpose of this study was to compare the cardiovascular responses of patients with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) to healthy control subjects when performing stressful cognitive tasks before and after strenuous exercise. Method Beat-by-beat blood pressure and electrocardiogram were recorded on 19 women with CFS and 20 healthy nonexercising (ie, sedentary) women while they performed cognitive tests before, immediately after, and 24 hours after incremental exercise to exhaustion. Results Diminished heart rate (p < .01) and systolic (p < .01) and diastolic (p < .01) blood pressure responses to stressful cognitive testing were seen in patients with CFS when compared with healthy, sedentary controls. This diminished stress response was seen consistently in patients with CFS across three separate cognitive testing sessions. Also, significant negative correlations between self-ratings of CFS symptom severity and cardiovascular responses were seen (r = −0.62, p < .01). Conclusions Women with CFS have a diminished cardiovascular response to cognitive stress; however, exercise did not magnify this effect. Also, the data showed that the patients with the lowest cardiovascular reactivity had the highest ratings of CFS symptom severity, which suggests that the individual response of the patient with CFS to stress plays a role in the common complaint of symptoms worsening after stress.


Psychosomatic Medicine | 2000

Cardiovascular stress responses and their relation to symptoms in Gulf War veterans with fatiguing illness.

Arnold Peckerman; John LaManca; Sharon L. Smith; Andre Taylor; Lana A. Tiersky; Claudia Pollet; Leo R. Korn; Barry E. Hurwitz; John E. Ottenweller; Benjamin H. Natelson

Objective The objective of this study was to examine whether inappropriate cardiovascular responses to stressors may underlie symptoms in Gulf War veterans with chronic fatigue. Methods Psychophysiological stress testing was performed on 51 Gulf War veterans with chronic fatigue (using the 1994 case definition of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention) and 42 healthy veterans. Hemodynamic responses to cold pressor, speech, and arithmetic stressors were evaluated using impedance cardiography. Results Veterans with chronic fatigue had diminished blood pressure responses during cognitive (speech and arithmetic) stress tests due to unusually small increases in total peripheral resistance. The cold pressor test, however, evoked similar blood pressure responses in the chronic fatigue and control groups. Low reactivity to cognitive stressors was associated with greater fatigue ratings among ill veterans, whereas an opposite relation was observed among healthy veterans. Self-reported neurocognitive decline was associated with low reactivity to the arithmetic task. Conclusions These results suggest a physiological basis for some Gulf War veterans’ reports of severe chronic fatigue. A greater deficit with responses processed through cerebral centers, as compared with a sensory stimulus (cold pressor), suggests a defect in cortical control of cardiovascular function. More research is needed to determine the specific mechanisms through which the dissociation between behavioral and cardiovascular activities identified in this study may be contributing to symptoms in Gulf War veterans.


Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2003

Perceived exertion in fatiguing illness: civilians with chronic fatigue syndrome.

Dane B. Cook; Paul R. Nagelkirk; Arnold Peckerman; Ashok Poluri; John LaManca; Benjamin H. Natelson

PURPOSE It has been reported that ratings of perceived exertion (RPE) are elevated in chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). However, methodological limitations have rendered this conclusion suspect. The purpose of the present investigation was to examine RPE during exercise in civilians with CFS by comparing subjects at both absolute exercise stage and relative oxygen consumption reference criteria. METHODS A sample of 39 civilian females (N = 19 CFS, 34 +/- 7 yr; N = 20 healthy controls, 33 +/- 7 yr) underwent a maximal exercise test on a treadmill. RPE were obtained during the last 15 s of each 3-min stage using Borgs 6-20 scale. RESULTS There were no significant differences in peak [OV0312]O(2), RER, or RPE. However, controls exercised longer (20.0 +/- 1.1 vs 15.9 +/- 1.1 min, P = 0.01, healthy vs CFS) and had higher peak HR (183 +/- 3 vs 174 +/- 2 bpm, P = 0.03, healthy vs CFS). Civilians with CFS reported higher RPE at stages 3 through 5 compared with controls (F(3,111)= 3.6,P = 0.017). Preexercise fatigue ratings were not a significant predictor of perceived exertion during exercise. There were no group differences (F(1,37)= 1.9, P = 0.17) when RPE were expressed relative to peak [OV0312]O(2). CONCLUSIONS Our results show that RPE are greater in civilians with CFS when the data are expressed in terms of absolute exercise intensity. However, by examining RPE relative to a common maximum (i.e., peak [OV0312]O(2)) no differences were observed. The findings of the present investigation challenge the notion that RPE are dysregulated in CFS.


Autonomic Neuroscience: Basic and Clinical | 2003

Effects of posttraumatic stress disorder on cardiovascular stress responses in Gulf War veterans with fatiguing illness.

Arnold Peckerman; Kristina Dahl; Rahul Chemitiganti; John LaManca; John E. Ottenweller; Benjamin H. Natelson

Abnormal cardiovascular stress responses have been reported in Gulf War veterans with chronic fatigue. However, many of these veterans also suffer from posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), which could potentially explain the reported abnormalities. To test this hypothesis, 55 Gulf veterans (GVs) with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) or idiopathic chronic fatigue (ICF) were stratified into groups with (N=16) and without (N=39) comorbid PTSD, and were compared to healthy Gulf veterans (N=47) on cardiovascular responses to a series of stressors. The CFS/ICF with PTSD group had lower blood pressure responses to speech and arithmetic tasks, and more precipitous declines and slower recoveries in blood pressure after standing up than the controls. Similar trends in the CF/ICF group without PTSD were not significant, however. Both CFS/ICF groups had blunted increases in peripheral vascular resistance during mental tasks. However, only the veterans with comorbid PTSD had diminished cardiac output responses to the mental stressors and excessive vasodilatory responses to standing. Symptoms of posttraumatic stress were significant predictors of hypotensive postural responses, but only in veterans reporting a significant exposure to wartime stress. We conclude that comorbid PTSD contributes to dysregulation of cardiovascular responses to mental and postural stressors in Gulf veterans with medically unexplained fatiguing illness, and may provide a physiological basis for increased somatic complaints in Gulf veterans with symptoms of posttraumatic stress.


Psychiatry Research-neuroimaging | 1999

Psychiatric diagnoses in Gulf War veterans with fatiguing illness

Gudrun Lange; Lana A. Tiersky; John DeLuca; Arnold Peckerman; Claudia Pollet; Theresa Policastro; Jennifer Scharer; John E. Ottenweller; Nancy Fiedler; Benjamin H. Natelson

The purpose of this study was to determine whether Gulf War Illness (GWI) can be explained by the presence of psychiatric disorders as assessed by DSM-III-R. To reduce the heterogeneity amongst Persian Gulf War veterans with GWI (PGV-F), only those were studied who presented with severe fatigue as a major complaint and also fulfilled clinical case definitions for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Idiopathic Chronic Fatigue, and/or Multiple Chemical Sensitivity. A total of 95 Registry PGVs were examined; 53 presented with GWI and 42 did not report any post-war health problems (PGV-H). All subjects were assessed for the presence of DSM-III-R Axis I psychiatric disorders. Compared to PGV-Hs, 49% of PGV-Fs had similar post-war psychiatric profiles: either no, or only one, psychiatric disorder was diagnosed. Psychiatric profiles of the remaining 51% of PGV-Fs were significantly different from PGV-Hs in that most of these veterans suffered from multiple post-war psychiatric diagnoses. The presence of psychiatric disorders as assessed by DSM-III-R criteria cannot explain symptoms of Gulf War Illness among all Persian Gulf veterans with severe fatiguing illness.


Clinical and Experimental Hypertension | 2001

Effects of gender and age on the cardiac baroreceptor reflex in hypertension.

Arnold Peckerman; Barry E. Hurwitz; Joachim H. Nagel; Christopher L. Leitten; Arthur Agatston; Neil Schneiderman

The present study examined whether alterations in the cardiac baroreceptor reflex in hypertension may be a function of constitutional differences associated with gender and age. These hypotheses were tested using a cross-sectional design that compared 20 normotensive and 21 hypertensive men and women of varying age for differences in baroreceptor reflex sensitivity and response latency for heart rate, obtained using a modified bolus phenylephrine (Oxford) method. Relative to their respective normotensive controls, baroreceptor reflex sensitivity was reduced in hypertensive men, but not in hypertensive women. Among normotensive subjects, men had greater baroreceptor reflex sensitivity than women. Independent from the effects associated with differences in blood pressure, age was not a significant predictor of reduction in baroreceptor reflex sensitivity. However, a combination of high blood pressure and older age was associated with a significant increase in baroreceptor reflex response time. In summary, gender and aging interacted with hypertension to alter two different aspects of the baroreceptor reflex. These results provide a preliminary indication that a decline in arterial baroreflex sensitivity may be more specific to hypertension in men than in women. Prolongation in baroreflex response latency in older hypertensive subjects also suggested that aging and hypertension may have a synergistic effect on cardiac parasympathetic function.


Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2003

Perceived exertion in fatiguing illness: Gulf War veterans with chronic fatigue syndrome.

Dane B. Cook; Paul R. Nagelkirk; Arnold Peckerman; Ashok Poluri; John LaManca; Benjamin H. Natelson

PURPOSE It has been reported that ratings of perceived exertion (RPE) are elevated in chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). We have challenged this notion by examining perceived exertion in civilian females with CFS and expressing the data relative to exercise capacity (%[OV0312]O(2max)). The purpose of the present investigation was to further examine RPE during exercise in a unique population of CFS patients, Gulf veterans (GV). METHODS Thirty-four GV (N = 15 CFS, 42 +/- 8 yr; N = 19 healthy, 43 +/- 5 yr) performed a maximal exercise test on a cycle ergometer. After a 3-min warm-up, exercise intensity increased by 30 W every minute until exhaustion. RPE were obtained during the last 15 s of each minute using Borgs CR-10 scale. RESULTS With the exception of peak [OV0312]E, there were no significant differences in any peak exercise variables. Repeated measures ANOVA revealed significantly higher RPE at each power output examined (F(1,32) = 16.4, P < 0.001). Group differences in RPE remained significant when analyzed relative to peak [OV0312]O(2) (F(1,32) = 7.2, P = 0.01). Both group main effects and the interaction were eliminated when self-reported fatigue symptoms were controlled for in the analyses. Power functions for RPE as a function of relative oxygen consumption were not different between groups and were significantly greater than a linear value of 1.0 (1.6 +/- 0.3 for both groups, P < 0.02). CONCLUSIONS Our results show that RPE are greater in GV with CFS regardless of whether the data were expressed in terms of absolute or relative exercise intensity. However, self-reported fatigue associated with CFS eliminated the group differences. These results suggest that GV with CFS were unique compared with their civilian counterparts. Future research aimed at determining the influence of preexisting fatigue on RPE during exercise is warranted.


Psychophysiology | 1991

Blood pressure reactivity and perception of pain during the forehead cold pressor test

Arnold Peckerman; Patrice G. Saab; Philip M. McCabe; Jay S. Skyler; Ray W. Winters; Maria M. Llabre; Neil Schneiderman

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Dane B. Cook

University of Wisconsin-Madison

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Paul R. Nagelkirk

University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey

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Kristina Dahl

University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey

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