• These topics have not been sufficiently explored yet, but important insights can help stratify risk and differentiate between physiological and pathological adaptations in female football players. (aspetar.com)
  • In competitive athletes, it is important to distinguish physiological adaptations as a result of training from pathological conditions such as cardiomyopathy, the most common cause of sudden cardiac death," Dr. Lell said. (sciencedaily.com)
  • This study aimed to clarify the physiological mechanisms associated with autonomic function and sleep through wheel exercise. (nature.com)
  • Both exercise-induced molecular mechanisms and physiological cardiac remodeling have been previously studied on a whole heart level. (researchgate.net)
  • This growing specialism has been fuelled by our physiological understanding of exercise-induced cardiac adaptation alongside the important ability to differentiate adaptation from disease. (bsecho.org)
  • demonstrated that some highly trained, elite athletes who developed LVH primarily increased septal thickness, which exceeded normal values (females up to 13 mm, and males up to 16 mm). 5 An athlete with wall thickness between 12 and 16 mm represents the so called "grey zone" between the physiological adaptation of the athlete and pathologic expression of HCM. (acc.org)
  • This projects aims to obtain new insights into cardiac conduction system formation through comparative morphological and physiological approach. (cas.cz)
  • 11] Tartibiyan B, Khorshii M. Predication of physiological indexes in exercise. (ac.ir)
  • However, the roles of autonomic function and sleep in the antihypertensive mechanisms of exercise are still not fully understood. (nature.com)
  • Furthermore, the exercise-induced changes in autonomic function occurred before those in sleep patterns, which were dependent on each other. (nature.com)
  • Effect of autonomic blockade on power spectrum of heart rate variability during exercise. (thieme-connect.com)
  • Modulation of cardiac autonomic activity during and immediately after exercise. (thieme-connect.com)
  • This study aimed to measure alterations in office BP, ambulatory BP, cardiac autonomic modulation and inflammatory and vascular biomarkers following a programme of IET in unmedicated hypertensive patients. (ox.ac.uk)
  • Office and ambulatory BP, cardiac autonomic modulation, and inflammatory and vascular biomarkers were recorded pre and post-IET and control periods. (ox.ac.uk)
  • Complementary, the data suggests that autonomic adaptations were not critical for the 50-m swimming performance. (akjournals.com)
  • The majority of sudden cardiac death events in athletes are due to ventricular arrhythmias as a result of underlying molecular and/or structural level pathologic substrate. (scienceopen.com)
  • In this article, we will review the physiologic cardiac adaptations to exercise along with arrhythmias seen in athletes with a focus on those commonly associated with sudden cardiac death. (scienceopen.com)
  • Since that time there has been intense scientific interest in the study of cardiac adaptation to repetitive bouts of vigorous activity, athletic performance, and the pathophysiology of structural, functional, and electrical cardiac diseases in competitive athletes. (scienceopen.com)
  • Anyone who wants to develop a sports cardiology service in this area requires as the most important prerequisite: scientific data to make evidence-based decisions on prevention and treatment of cardiac disease in female athletes. (aspetar.com)
  • It is known that athletes have a 2.8 - 5.3% higher risk of sudden cardiac death (SCD) than there no athlete peers 1 . (aspetar.com)
  • Previous studies have shown consistently that female athletes have a lower risk for sudden cardiac events during sports 3 than their male counterparts. (aspetar.com)
  • A balanced increase in heart dimensions is also observed in female athletes, although the absolute cardiac dimensions are smaller than males, with the largest cavities found, as in males, in endurance athletes. (aspetar.com)
  • The cardiac MR images revealed that, compared to the recreational athletes, the triathletes had larger left atria and larger right and left ventricles. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Background Most studies on cardiac function in athletes describe overall heart function in predominately male participants. (bmj.com)
  • These findings give new insights into cardiac adaptation to endurance training and could also be of use for sports cardiologists evaluating female athletes. (bmj.com)
  • The power of spectral analysis of heart rate variability in athletes during exercise in normal man. (thieme-connect.com)
  • Medical cardiac care of the paediatric athlete is however in its infancy, and the international guidelines that are present for adult athletes, are not yet available. (nih.gov)
  • Although many athletes show benign abnormalities on the ECG, the presence of changes such as T-wave inversions, pathological Q-waves and ST-segment depression especially in Caucasian athletes is concerning for pathological cardiac hypertrophy. (acc.org)
  • Many clinicians who see athletes often prefer a CPX to standard treadmill exercise testing (TMET). (acc.org)
  • Due to its novelty (world class athletes, field-based testing, etc.), we invited Marco to publish his data here on our HIIT Science Blog and in SPSR , as it reveals a practical and convenient way to monitor individual athlete adaptation to altitude training. (hiitscience.com)
  • Biventricular myocardial adaptation to different training protocols in competitive master athletes. (ac.ir)
  • An estimated 1 to 3/100,000 apparently healthy young athletes die suddenly during exercise. (msdmanuals.com)
  • Polymorphisms in ACE and ACTN3 Genes and Blood Pressure Response to Acute Exercise in Elite Male Athletes from Serbia. (cdc.gov)
  • Prior to my appointment as PVC in February 2020 I have previously been Associate Dean for Scholarship, Research and Knowledge Transfer in the Faculty of Science, Head of the Research Institute for Sport and Exercise Sciences, interim Director of School of Sport and Exercise Sciences as well as Professor of Exercise and Cardiovascular Physiology. (ljmu.ac.uk)
  • I attained my undergraduate degree in Sport Sciences from Liverpool Polytechnic in 1987 then went on to complete an MSc in Exercise Physiology at Queens University Canada (as a Commonwealth Scholar recipient) and my PhD at Manchester Metropolitan University. (ljmu.ac.uk)
  • In particular, we hypothesized that a favourable adaptation profile in terms of resting physiology would be reflected by a smaller or absent increase in resting HR, a smaller or absent reduction in HRV and smaller or absent variation in HRV when going from sea level to altitude (20). (hiitscience.com)
  • This page presents a comprehensive list of exercise physiology research paper topics , organized into ten categories with ten topics in each. (iresearchnet.com)
  • Students studying health sciences can find inspiration and relevant ideas for their research papers in the dynamic field of exercise physiology. (iresearchnet.com)
  • Expert advice is provided on choosing suitable topics, and guidance is given on the process of writing an exercise physiology research paper. (iresearchnet.com)
  • Discover the world of exercise physiology research paper topics and unlock the potential of your academic journey. (iresearchnet.com)
  • The field of exercise physiology offers a vast array of research opportunities for students studying health sciences. (iresearchnet.com)
  • To assist you in your research endeavors, we present a comprehensive list of exercise physiology research paper topics. (iresearchnet.com)
  • Divided into ten categories, each containing ten topics, this list encompasses a wide range of subjects within the realm of exercise physiology. (iresearchnet.com)
  • Explore these cutting-edge exercise physiology research paper topics and unlock the potential for impactful discoveries and contributions to the field. (iresearchnet.com)
  • Desirable effects of exercise on cardiovascular health in pediatrics due to different physiology than other ages, has not been well elucidated. (ac.ir)
  • Advanced cardiovascular exercise physiology. (ac.ir)
  • These carefully selected patients could exercise without serious ventricular arrhythmias and had no other medical condition that limited their exercise tolerance. (biomedcentral.com)
  • In cases involving cardiac conditions, it is important to exclude patients with valvular heart disease, ventricular hypertrophy, dangerous arrhythmias, and malignant hypertension. (medscape.com)
  • Participants with coronary artery disease who had undergone a cardiac procedure were randomly assigned either to traditional moderate-intensity exercise or vigorous stair climbing: three rounds of six flights of 12 stairs, separated by recovery periods of walking, with participants selecting their own stepping pace. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Researchers compared the results and found that individuals who had done traditional exercise and those who had done stair-climbing both increased their cardiorespiratory fitness after four weeks of supervised training and maintained those levels for an additional eight weeks of unsupervised training. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Several studies relating to the effect of interval training on aerobic fitness indicate that cardiorespiratory adaptation depends mainly on the initial fitness level of the subjects, the training intensity, the frequency of training sessions, and the duration of the training sessions and programs. (bmj.com)
  • and altered cardiac tolerance associated with various pathological states. (cas.cz)
  • This includes gender specific knowledge on cardiac training adaptation and risk and potential causes of sudden cardiac events. (aspetar.com)
  • Excessive training in either resistance or endurance disciplines leads to specific heart adaptations, and extreme endurance training is thought to be associated with a predisposition to sudden cardiac events. (sciencedaily.com)
  • My research focus in recent years has been to support the athlete cardiac pre-participation screening programme at LJMU, undertaking basic research and developing applied service research that has support two REF Impact Case Studies. (ljmu.ac.uk)
  • The occurrence of sudden cardiac death (SCD) in an athlete is a tragic event that deeply affects family members, teammates, and at times, an entire community. (scienceopen.com)
  • The aim of this article is to provide and introduction to the cardiac care of the paediatric athlete to facilitate healthy and above all, safe talent development, but also provide guidance on how to distinguish adaptive, beneficial cardiovascular remodelling from underlying pathology of congenital or inherited cardiovascular disease. (nih.gov)
  • Physiologic adaptation to exercise is dependent on the type of exercise being performed and the degree with which it is performed. (scienceopen.com)
  • As a result, physiologic adaptations related to training such as increased myocardial thickness may occur. (acc.org)
  • The degree of hypertrophy associated with athletic physiologic adaptations can overlap with the pathologic hypertrophy of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), leading to difficulty in distinguishing the two entities. (acc.org)
  • The acute and chronic effects of exercise on the heart have interested academics, sports participants and practitioners for many years and as such the field of sports cardiology has developed significantly. (bsecho.org)
  • Clinical research in cardiology : official journal of the German Cardiac Society. (regionh.dk)
  • It also induces electrophysiological and structural cardiac adaptations in response to the increased hemodynamic load associated with the sport, the most common adaptive changes are increase in vagal tone and cardiac chamber size. (aspetar.com)
  • These findings suggest that exercise induces adaptations in mitochondrial dynamics, potentially increasing mitochondrial function, and SJL may disrupt mitochondrial dynamics both in the sedentary and exercise trained states. (wku.edu)
  • 713. Poster session presented at Cardiac Rehabilitation. (pure.fo)
  • No matter which types of exercise may be needed initially and are applied to remedy a patient's specific condition, the final goal of rehabilitation is to achieve, whenever possible, an optimal level of physical fitness by the end of the treatment regimen. (medscape.com)
  • To perform a translation and cross-cultural adaptation of the Cardiac Rehabilitation Barriers Scale (CRBS) for use in Korea, followed by psychometric validation. (e-arm.org)
  • The CRBS was developed to assess patients' perception of the degree to which patient, provider and health system-level barriers affect their cardiac rehabilitation (CR) participation. (e-arm.org)
  • Cardiac rehabilitation (CR) is prescribed for patients with cardiac disease for secondary prevention, based on evidence that participation in CR reduces cardiovascular mortality when compared with patients not participating in CR [ 2 ]. (e-arm.org)
  • We've shown stair-climbing is a safe, efficient and feasible option for cardiac rehabilitation, which is particularly relevant during the pandemic when many people don't have the option to exercise in a gym," she says. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Researchers worked closely with the Cardiac Health and Rehabilitation Centre at the Hamilton General Hospital to develop an exercise protocol that did not require specialized equipment or monitoring and could be easily performed outside a laboratory. (sciencedaily.com)
  • The cardiac adaptations in the elite triathletes we studied were characterized by a balanced increase in left and right ventricular muscle mass, wall thickness, dilation and diastolic function," Dr. Lell said. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Cardiac adaptations in elite triathletes in our study were not associated with sudden cardiac death," Dr. Lell said. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Thus, the purpose of this study was to determine whether changes in resting HR and HRV during the beginning of a 3-week training camp at altitude would be representative of training adaptation at the end of the training camp in elite triathletes. (hiitscience.com)
  • The triathletes' resting heart rates were also 17 percent lower than those of the control group, which leads to greater cardiac blood supply and more economized heart function. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Injuries used in the sports medicine world best steroid cycle loads, greater exercise capacity, and greater cardiac adaptations among cyclists. (theopeninter.net)
  • In particular, reductions in HRV and increases in HR, as measured at rest first thing in the morning, have been reported the day after high intensity aerobic exercise across a wide range of individuals (5, 6, 7). (hiitscience.com)
  • CONCLUSION: Exercise training improves cardiac structure and diastolic function in hypertensive women with superior effects of a hybrid training mode like soccer compared both to endurance training and high intensity interval training alone. (pure.fo)
  • Strength-based sporting activities (e.g., track and field throwing events, weightlifting, karate/judo, American football) result in a normal or slightly increased cardiac output, an increase in peripheral vascular resistance, and transient hypertension, imposing a significant pressure load on both the left ventricle and the right ventricle. (scienceopen.com)
  • This page will focus on chronic adaptations to exercise stimuli - i.e. changes that occur when an individual is regularly training or involved in an appropriate exercise regime for their specific goals and sport. (physio-pedia.com)
  • ACMS's exercise management for persons with chronic diseases and disabilities. (thieme-connect.com)
  • Exercise training has been demonstrated to cause beneficial cardiac adaptations in different patient groups. (pure.fo)
  • The beneficial effects of exercise training in cardiac patients without symptomatic heart failure have been well described and will not be reviewed here. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Even in just a short period, whether it was moderate intensity, continuous training or high-intensity stair climbing, there were beneficial adaptations in muscles after a cardiac procedure," Phillips says. (sciencedaily.com)
  • We study mechanisms responsible for developmental changes of cardiac ischemic tolerance. (cas.cz)
  • We study the effects of various forms of hypertension on cardiac ischemic tolerance. (cas.cz)
  • Exercise caused myocardial hypertrophy in both control and SJL LD conditions (Main Effect - EX, p (wku.edu)
  • DeLateur defined therapeutic exercise as bodily movement prescribed to correct an impairment, improve musculoskeletal function, or maintain a state of well-being. (medscape.com)
  • Patients with musculoskeletal problems need an evaluation by a physical therapist before beginning an exercise regimen. (medscape.com)
  • In conclusion, wheel exercise can modulate sleep-related cardiovascular dysfunction and the flattening of circadian rhythm, preventing the progression of hypertension, which reduces the incidence of cardiovascular diseases. (nature.com)
  • The severity of symptomatic exercise limitation varies between patients with CHF and appears to be unrelated to the extent of left ventricular systolic dysfunction at rest. (biomedcentral.com)
  • We present lab-based research studies aimed at establishing associations between ventricular-arterial interactions and cardio-respiratory fitness and the assessment of exercise induced right ventricular dysfunction during and following 6-hours of prolonged strenuous cycling exercise. (bsecho.org)
  • Until the late 1980s, avoidance of physical exercise was the standard recommendation for all patients suffering from heart failure. (biomedcentral.com)
  • KATP channel Kir6.2 E23K variant overrepresented in human heart failure is associated with impaired exercise stress response. (cdc.gov)
  • Heart failure develops when the heart, via an abnormality of cardiac function (detectable or not), fails to pump blood at a rate commensurate with the requirements of the metabolizing tissues or is able to do so only with an elevated diastolic filling pressure. (medscape.com)
  • This chest radiograph shows an enlarged cardiac silhouette and edema at the lung bases, signs of acute heart failure. (medscape.com)
  • Heart failure (see the images below) may be caused by myocardial failure but may also occur in the presence of near-normal cardiac function under conditions of high demand. (medscape.com)
  • Heart failure always causes circulatory failure, but the converse is not necessarily the case, because various noncardiac conditions (eg, hypovolemic shock, septic shock) can produce circulatory failure in the presence of normal, modestly impaired, or even supranormal cardiac function. (medscape.com)
  • Ventricular arrhythmia (VA) may be an isolated and completely benign finding in children, a marker of serious systemic disease or myopathy, or a mechanism for syncope and sudden cardiac death (SCD). (medscape.com)
  • Catecholamine-induced T-wave lability in congenital long QT syndrome: a novel phenomenon associated with syncope and cardiac arrest. (cdc.gov)
  • Sudden cardiac death related to athletic competition is a rare but tragic event. (scienceopen.com)
  • Left ventricular wall segment motion after ultra-endurance exercise in humans assessed by myocardial speckle tracking. (ljmu.ac.uk)
  • Participation in an exercise program was historically considered to be ill-advised for patients with significant left ventricular impairment. (biomedcentral.com)
  • However, comparative studies on different exercise training modes are sparse in sedentary women diagnosed with arterial hypertension. (pure.fo)
  • Animal studies and clinical observations have identified exercise as an important factor in preventing and treating hypertension. (nature.com)
  • Endurance-based sports activities (e.g., rowing, swimming, cycling, and long-distance running) result in sustained elevations in cardiac output and normal or decreased peripheral vascular resistance, and importantly, impose significant volume challenges to all cardiac chambers and vessels leading away from the heart. (scienceopen.com)
  • Interest has been shown in the possibility that some forms of exercise therapy, either localized or systemic, could benefit the peripheral manifestations of CHF and thereby modify the symptoms of patients with CHF. (biomedcentral.com)
  • These authors showed no improvement in exercise cardiac output, so the training-induced benefits appeared to be mainly caused by peripheral adaptations. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Conversely, maximal values for oxygen consumption, cardiac output, isokinetic leg extension power and jumping power remained unaffected. (galileo-training.com)
  • We study cardiac tolerance to injury caused by acute oxygen deprivation from the molecular level to the whole organism using animal models. (cas.cz)
  • Prolonged exposure to hypoxic environment leads to adaptation which is associated with improved cardiac tolerance to acute oxygen deprivation. (cas.cz)
  • secundum en mujer oxygen was administrated and pharmacological treatment was started. (bvsalud.org)
  • Combined Effects of Whole-Body Vibration, Resistance Exercise, and Vascular Occlusion on Skeletal Muscle and Performance. (galileo-training.com)
  • The purpose of this study was to evaluate the effects of a new high-intensity training modality comprised of vibration exercise with superimposed resistance exercise and vascular occlusion (vibroX) on skeletal muscle and performance. (galileo-training.com)
  • The overall aim of our research is to gain knowledge regarding the basal regulation of the human cardiovascular system with a focus on cardiac and skeletal muscle and to understand by what mechanisms physical activity, life style related disease and aging affect cardiovascular function and growth. (ku.dk)
  • Therefore, RJ consumption along with sports exercise can be recommended in menopause and diabetes. (magiran.com)
  • This study aimed to evaluate the effect of aerobic exercise and eryngium billardieri extract consumption on insulin resistance and lipid profile in obese women with type 2 diabetes. (magiran.com)
  • Tco-est and Tre measurements were obtained in thermoneutral and heat stress conditions (high temperature and relative humidity) during four different experiments including treadmill exercise, cycling exercise, passive heat stress, and treadmill exercise while wearing personal protective equipment (PPE). (cdc.gov)
  • The diagnostic utility of recovery phase QTc during treadmill exercise stress testing in the evaluation of long QT syndrome. (cdc.gov)
  • Exercise training in carefully selected patients has been shown to be safe and to improve exercise capacity. (biomedcentral.com)
  • This review looks at the controlled clinical trial evidence for the role of exercise therapy in the management of patients with CHF. (biomedcentral.com)
  • It was not until the end of the 1980s that reports were published showing that physical training could increase exercise capacity in patients with CHF. (biomedcentral.com)
  • Other cardiac cases, older and/or ill patients, and other patients at risk, such as those with exercise-induced asthma, hemoglobinopathies, diabetes, or obesity, should have an exercise stress test carried out under careful medical supervision. (medscape.com)
  • 1 Similar decrements in patients with pre-existing cardiac conditions could mean acceleration of disease progression and heightened disease burden. (nursingcenter.com)
  • The purpose of this article was to review the current literature on COVID-19 and PA among adult patients with cardiovascular implantable electronic devices (CIEDs), including pacemakers, implantable cardioverter defibrillators (ICDs), cardiac resynchronization therapy devices, and implanted cardiac monitors, and its implications. (nursingcenter.com)
  • Although the benefit of CR is well established, many cardiac patients do not attend CR [ 3 ]. (e-arm.org)
  • The items were developed based on literature review of multilevel barriers, and administered in a sample of cardiac patients to establish psychometric properties. (e-arm.org)
  • While it is widely known that exercise and lifestyle changes reduce the risk of secondary cardiovascular disease, statistics suggest less than a quarter of all cardiac patients adhere to fitness programs. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Previously, there had been very few studies of the impact of exercise on cardiac patients' muscle specifically. (sciencedaily.com)
  • Neurohumoral and ambulatory haemodynamic adaptations following isometric exercise training in unmedicated hypertensive patients. (ox.ac.uk)
  • 10 However, it should be noted that some HCM patients are able to exercise at a high level and, therefore, may be able to achieve VO 2 exceeding this level. (acc.org)
  • Brief, vigorous stair-climbing and traditional moderate intensity exercise both changed fitness, which is a key predictor of mortality after a cardiac event," says Maureen MacDonald, one of the lead researchers on both studies and a professor in McMaster's Department of Kinesiology. (sciencedaily.com)
  • according to this there is a higher incidence of sudden arrhythmic death syndrome (SADS) in structurally normal hearts in women, but lower incidence of structural cardiomyopathies and importantly, lower frequency of death associated to exercise. (aspetar.com)
  • The aim of this study was to effect of 12 weeks of moderate-intensity aerobic exercise on cardiac structural and functional parameters in pediatrics. (ac.ir)
  • The results of present study demonstrates that after 12 weeks moderate intensity aerobic exercise some of cardiac structural and functional parameters in pediatrics will improve, As these changes can have an effective role in improvement of Pediatrics cardiovascular system. (ac.ir)
  • There are only a few studies evaluating the sex differences in cardiac adaptation to exercise 6,7,8,9 and even fewer exploring the influence of the type of sport or ethnicity 10,11 . (aspetar.com)
  • Conclusions We found differences between trained and untrained females in segmental systolic myocardial function, but not in global measures of systolic function, including cardiac synchrony. (bmj.com)
  • Indexing measures of longitudinal tissue velocities by cardiac length eradicated or altered a majority of statistical differences. (bmj.com)
  • 1 V˙o 2max must be associated with other factors such as ventilatory threshold (VT), velocity at V˙o 2max , and exercise economy to explain differences in endurance performance. (bmj.com)
  • The BP adaptations were associated with a significant (P = 0.018) reduction in the average real variability of 24-h ambulatory BP following IET, compared with control. (ox.ac.uk)
  • performance anxiety, competitive stress, orthopedic injuries, cardiac performance, sports-related eating disorders and water intoxication during endurance sports. (georgetown.edu)
  • Cardiologist Allen J. Taylor, MD , can address fitness and cardiac performance, including adaptations to various forms of exercise. (georgetown.edu)
  • Effect of central hypervolemia on cardiac performance during exercise. (thieme-connect.com)
  • While most studies have focused on the relationship between HRV and training load (8, 9), less work has been completed in the applied setting examining the relationship between HRV changes and training adaptation or performance (10, 11, 12, 13). (hiitscience.com)
  • Training camps provide a unique opportunity for coaches to manipulate various training-related variables in an attempt to trigger specific adaptations that may result in improved performance. (hiitscience.com)
  • Additionally, changes in submaximal exercise HR during an altitude camp have shown the strongest relationship with running performance (19), hence making submaximal exercise HR an ideal candidate to track an athlete's response to the training camp. (hiitscience.com)
  • In this work, due to a lack of performance data, we relied on submaximal exercise HR data to determine responders and non-responders to an altitude camp. (hiitscience.com)
  • Exercise is a fundamental building block for health, performance and well-being. (medbase.ch)
  • PURPOSE: To examine effects of 15 weeks of soccer training versus low volume high intensity interval swim training and prolonged continuous moderate intensity swim training on cardiac structure and function in middle-aged, sedentary, hypertensive women. (pure.fo)
  • Exercise training increases baroreceptor gain sensitivity in normal and hypertensive rats. (nature.com)
  • Daily exercise reduces measures of heart rate and blood pressure variability in hypertensive rats. (nature.com)
  • and these changes, identified as exercise-induced cardiac remodeling, are also influenced by the age, race of the players and the intensity of training and/or length of sports career among others factors 12 . (aspetar.com)
  • 0.05) after 12 weeks moderate intensity aerobic exercise. (ac.ir)
  • The subjects in the exercise group performed aerobic exercise training up to 55 -70% of heart rate reserve , three sessions per week, 25 to min per session for 12 weeks. (ac.ir)
  • Rodrigues B, Feriani DJ, Gambassi BB, Irigoyen MC, Angelis KD, Hélio José Júnior C. Exercise training on cardiovascular diseases: role of animal models in the elucidation of the mechanisms. (nature.com)
  • Male C57BL/6 mice (n = 40) were allocated to four groups (n = 10/group): 1) Control Light:Dark cycle, Sedentary (CON-SED), 2) Control Light:Dark cycle, Exercise (CON-EX), 3) SJL, sedentary (SJL-SED), or SJL, exercise (SJL-EX). (wku.edu)
  • Quantification of CITED4 expression and microstructural tissue helicity reveals a significant correlation across both sedentary and exercise mouse cohorts. (researchgate.net)
  • helicity reveals a signi fi cant correlation across both sedentary and exercise mouse cohorts. (researchgate.net)
  • Consensus statement on placebo effects in sports and exercise: the need for conceptual clarity, methodological rigour, and the elucidation of neurobiological mechanisms. (canterbury.ac.uk)
  • A typical pattern of positive adaptation to an altitude camp shows submaximal exercise HR initially higher for a given exercise level, but gradually lowers to sea level values by the end of the training camp (17). (hiitscience.com)
  • On the other hand, a lack of adaptation results in submaximal exercise HR levels similar to the ones of the first week at altitude even at the end of the training camp (18). (hiitscience.com)
  • The findings, published in closely related studies in the journals Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise and Frontiers, address the most frequently cited barriers to exercise: time, equipment and access to gym facilities. (sciencedaily.com)