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fatigue
(redirected from fatigability)

   Also found in: Dictionary/thesaurus, Medical, Wikipedia, Hutchinson 0.15 sec.

fatigue, in engineering

fatigue, in engineering, microscopic cracking of materials, especially metals, after repeated applications of stress. Fissures may be formed within pieces of metal during their manufacture when, while cooling from the molten state, they shrink and tensile stresses arise. Once a crack has started it spreads under repeated stress until the metal ruptures. Examples of fatigue are found in steel rails, beams, and girders. Metallic fatigue resulted in the catastrophes encountered by many of the Liberty ships built during World Wars I and II and the crashes of a number of the earliest jet aircraft constructed. Materials used in construction are tested for fatigue strength, or endurance limit, by being subjected mechanically to cyclic applications of stress. Steel parts are sometimes treated by shot blasting to increase their fatigue resistance.

fatigue, in physiology

fatigue, in physiology, inability to perform reasonable and necessary physical or mental activity. When the metabolic reserves of the body are exhausted and the waste products increased, as for example after prolonged exertion, the body finds it difficult to continue its function and activity. The accumulation of lactic acid lactic acid, CH3CHOHCO2H, a colorless liquid organic acid. It is miscible with water or ethanol. Lactic acid is a fermentation product of lactose (milk sugar); it is present in sour milk, koumiss, leban, yogurt, and cottage cheese.
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 in muscle tissue and the depletion of glycogen glycogen (glī`kəjən)
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 (stored glucose) results in muscle fatigue. The contractile properties of muscle are reduced, and continued exertion is impossible unless the muscle is allowed to rest. In the normal body a period of rest permits redistribution of nutritive elements to the muscles and tissues and elimination of accumulated waste products; the body is then ready to resume activity. There are some persons in whom fatigue is a chronic state that does not necessarily result from activity or exertion. In some instances this abnormal fatigue may be associated with systemic disorders such as anemia, a deficiency of protein or oxygen in the blood, addiction to drugs, increased or decreased function of the endocrine glands, or kidney disease in which there is a large accumulation of waste products. If excessive fatigue occurs over a prolonged period, exhaustion (marked loss of vital and nervous power) may result. In most persons with chronic fatigue, however, the condition seems to be associated with bipolar disorder. Thorough medical and psychiatric examination may be required.

fatigue

In engineering, manifestation of progressive fracture in a solid under cyclic loading, as in the case of a metal strip that ruptures after repeated bending back and forth (see metal fatigue). Fatigue fracture begins with one or several cracks that spread in the course of repeated application of forces until complete rupture suddenly occurs when the small unaffected portion is too weak to sustain the load. See also ductility, testing machine.


fatigue
1. Physiol the temporary inability of an organ or part to respond to a stimulus because of overactivity
2. Mechanics the progressive cracking of a material subjected to alternating stresses, esp vibrations


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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
Fatigability occurs when a "single muscle or group of muscles becomes weaker after repeated use," (36(p160)) a definition similar to Halstead's definition for peripheral fatigue.
Symptoms include dizziness, backache, fatigability, general weakness, insomnia, frequent dreams, and complaints of sexual dysfunction (such as premature ejaculation and erectile dysfunction).
There was a concern previously, because of fatigability and weakness, that to overexert yourself might be a bad thing," she said.
 
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