keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33351915/extensive-coronary-artery-disease-in-a-long-distance-athlete-a-case-report
#61
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Vasiliki Katsi, Stergios Soulaidopoulos, Constantina Aggeli, George Latsios, Dimitrios Tousoulis, Konstantinos Toutouzas, Konstantinos Tsioufis
Despite the established benefits of regular physical activity in cardiovascular disease prevention, coronary events in the context of atherosclerotic coronary artery disease are the most common cause of exercise-related sudden death. A paradoxical development of an increased coronary calcification burden is likely associated with endurance training even in the absence of any of the traditional cardiovascular risk factors. In this case report, we present a 50-year-old male long-distance runner with excessive subclinical myocardial ischemia...
October 1, 2021: Journal of Athletic Training
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33291227/endurance-runners-with-intramyocellular-lipid-accumulation-and-high-insulin-sensitivity-have-enhanced-expression-of-genes-related-to-lipid-metabolism-in-muscle
#62
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Saori Kakehi, Yoshifumi Tamura, Kageumi Takeno, Shin-Ichi Ikeda, Yuji Ogura, Norio Saga, Takeshi Miyatsuka, Hisashi Naito, Ryuzo Kawamori, Hirotaka Watada
CONTEXT: Endurance-trained athletes have high oxidative capacities, enhanced insulin sensitivities, and high intracellular lipid accumulation in muscle. These characteristics are likely due to altered gene expression levels in muscle. DESIGN AND SETTING: We compared intramyocellular lipid (IMCL), insulin sensitivity, and gene expression levels of the muscle in eight nonobese healthy men (control group) and seven male endurance athletes (athlete group). Their IMCL levels were measured by proton-magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and their insulin sensitivity was evaluated by glucose infusion rate (GIR) during a euglycemic-hyperinsulinemic clamp...
December 6, 2020: Journal of Clinical Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33199545/prevalence-of-impaired-orthostasis-after-concussion-injury
#63
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Michael F La Fountaine, Asante Hohn, Caroline Leahy, Anthony Testa
OBJECTIVE: To determine the prevalence of orthostatic hypotension (OHypo) and hypertension (OHTN), respectively after a concussion in collegiate athletes. BACKGROUND: Orthostasis causes a gravity-dependent redistribution of blood volume to the lower extremities. The baroreflex coordinates the cardiovascular autonomic nervous system to mitigate aberrant changes in systolic blood pressure (SBP). In autonomic dysfunction (AD), impaired accommodation may lead to a clinically significant? SBP decreases (OHypo: SBP fall = 20 mm Hg) or paradoxical increases (OHTN: SBP rise = 20 mm Hg) within 3 minutes of assuming the standing (STND) posture...
November 17, 2020: Neurology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33192843/health-and-wellbeing-in-higher-education-a-comparison-of-music-and-sport-students-through-the-framework-of-self-determination-theory
#64
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Elena Alessandri, Dawn Rose, David Wasley
Students in Higher Education report high levels of mental health issues and psychological distress. Paradoxical findings on performance-orientated students, such as athletes and musicians, suggest that the demands of highly skilled vocations may enhance wellbeing while being detrimental to physical and mental health. To provide timely and appropriate help, institutions need to understand what areas of health and wellbeing are compromised in different student groups. In this study, we compared performance-orientated (music and sport) students to other students and the general population on a selection of wellbeing (WHO5, PWS, and WEMWBS), mental and physical health (K10, SF12, and PHQ9), and trait measures (TIPI, LOT-R, and PCS)...
2020: Frontiers in Psychology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33160079/decoration-of-myocellular-lipid-droplets-with-perilipins-as-a-marker-for-in-vivo-lipid-droplet-dynamics-a-super-resolution-microscopy-study-in-trained-athletes-and-insulin-resistant-individuals
#65
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Anne Gemmink, Sabine Daemen, Bram Brouwers, Joris Hoeks, Gert Schaart, Kèvin Knoops, Patrick Schrauwen, Matthijs K C Hesselink
In many different cell types neutral lipids can be stored in lipid droplets (LDs). Nowadays, LDs are viewed as dynamic organelles, which store and release fatty acids depending on energy demand (LD dynamics). Proteins like perilipin 2 (PLIN2) and PLIN5 decorate the LD membrane and are determinants of LD lipolysis and fat oxidation, thus affecting LD dynamics. Trained athletes and type 2 diabetes (T2D) patients both have high levels of intramyocellular lipid (IMCL). While IMCL content scales negatively with insulin resistance, athletes are highly insulin sensitive in contrast to T2D patients, the so-called athlete's paradox...
November 4, 2020: Biochimica et Biophysica Acta. Molecular and Cell Biology of Lipids
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33106032/ill-fates-and-heroic-feats-a-thematic-analysis-of-elite-athleticism-and-chronic-illness
#66
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Laura D Russell
Far more than an individual endeavor, work is a collective enterprise, an ethic, in which individuals participate to fulfill needs of their surrounding social world. Specifically, sport professionals undergo strenuous physical labor to compete and garner public admiration. Yet, when chronic illness interferes with their performances, how are athletes expected to respond? Through a thematic analysis of newspaper discourses covering professional golfer Tim Simpson's mysterious illness over time, this study explores an athlete's persistence to compete despite his deteriorating health...
October 26, 2020: Health Communication
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33089638/why-does-strength-training-improve-endurance-performance
#67
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Andrew W Best
OBJECTIVE: The specificity of training principle holds that adaptations to exercise training closely match capacity to the specific demands of the stimulus. Improvements in endurance sport performance gained through strength training are a notable exception to this principle. While the proximate mechanisms for how strength training produces muscular adaptations beneficial to endurance sports are increasingly well understood, the ultimate causes of this phenomenon remain unexplored. METHODS: Using a holistic approach tying together exercise physiology and evolution, I argue that we can reconcile the apparent "endurance training specificity paradox...
October 21, 2020: American Journal of Human Biology: the Official Journal of the Human Biology Council
https://read.qxmd.com/read/33059398/electrocardiographic-interpretation-in-athletes
#68
REVIEW
Mark Abela, Sanjay Sharma
Participation in regular exercise of moderate intensity is associated with a plethora of systemic benefits, including a reduction in risk factors for coronary atherosclerosis; however, intensive exercise may paradoxically culminate in sudden cardiac arrest among individuals harboring arrhythmogenic substrates. The precise mechanism for arrhythmogenesis is likely multifactorial, however, surges in catecholamines, electrolyte shifts, acid-base disturbances, increased core temperature and demand myocardial ischemia are potential contributors...
October 2021: Minerva cardiology and angiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32988702/resting-respiratory-resistance-in-female-teenage-athletes-with-and-without-exercise-induced-laryngeal-obstruction
#69
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nancy Pearl Solomon, Andrea Pham, Sally Gallena, Arthur T Johnson, Jafar Vossoughi, Yasmeen Faroqi-Shah
OBJECTIVE: Exercise-induced laryngeal obstruction (EILO) occurs with paradoxical vocal fold motion or supraglottic collapse during moderate to vigorous exercise. Previously, Gallena et al (2015) reported lower-than-normal inspiratory (Ri ) and expiratory (Re ) resistances during resting tidal breathing (RTB) in female teenage athletes with EILO. This study aimed to replicate that unexpected result. METHOD: The Airflow Perturbation Device measured Ri and Re during three 1-minute trials of RTB in 16 teenage female athletes with EILO and 16 sex-, age-, and height-matched controls...
September 25, 2020: Journal of Voice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32880685/label-free-cars-microscopy-reveals-similar-triacylglycerol-acyl-chain-length-and-saturation-in-myocellular-lipid-droplets-of-athletes-and-individuals-with-type-2-diabetes
#70
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Sabine Daemen, Anne Gemmink, Alexandra Paul, Nils Billecke, Katrina Rieger, Sapun H Parekh, Matthijs K C Hesselink
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: Intramyocellular lipid (IMCL) content associates with development of insulin resistance, albeit not in insulin-sensitive endurance-trained athletes (trained). Qualitative and spatial differences in muscle lipid composition may underlie this so-called athlete's paradox. Here we studied triacylglycerol (TAG) composition of individual myocellular lipid droplets (LDs) in trained individuals and individuals with type 2 diabetes mellitus. METHODS: Trained ([Formula: see text] 71...
September 3, 2020: Diabetologia
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32418667/paradoxical-vocal-fold-movement-a-retrospective-analysis
#71
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Dylan Vance, Cameron Heyd, Matthew Pier, Ghiath Alnouri, Robert T Sataloff
BACKGROUND: Paradoxical vocal fold motion (PVFM) is a disorder in which the vocal folds adduct inappropriately during inspiration resulting in episodic dyspnea and sometimes respiratory distress. Diagnosis is obtained through careful history, physical examination, flexible laryngoscopic examination with provocative maneuvers, and laryngeal electromyography. The pathogenesis and clinical findings of this disorder are not known. OBJECTIVES: To determine characteristics of patients with confirmed PVFM and to evaluate efficacy of current treatments...
November 2021: Journal of Voice
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32139784/both-higher-fitness-level-and-higher-current-physical-activity-level-may-be-required-for-intramyocellular-lipid-accumulation-in-non-athlete-men
#72
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nozomu Yamasaki, Yoshifumi Tamura, Kageumi Takeno, Saori Kakehi, Yuki Someya, Takashi Funayama, Yasuhiko Furukawa, Hideyoshi Kaga, Ruriko Suzuki, Daisuke Sugimoto, Satoshi Kadowaki, Motonori Sato, Takashi Nakagata, Miho Nishitani-Yokoyama, Kazunori Shimada, Hiroyuki Daida, Shigeki Aoki, Hiroaki Sato, Ryuzo Kawamori, Hirotaka Watada
Accumulation of intramyocellular lipid (IMCL) is observed in individuals with insulin resistance as well as insulin-sensitive endurance athletes with high peak oxygen consumption (VO2 peak), which is called the athlete's paradox. It remains unclear whether non-athletes with higher fitness levels have IMCL accumulation and higher insulin sensitivity in general. In this study, we investigated the association between IMCL accumulation and muscle insulin sensitivity (M-IS) in subjects with high or low VO2 peak...
March 5, 2020: Scientific Reports
https://read.qxmd.com/read/32072237/reductive-stress-in-striated-muscle-cells
#73
REVIEW
Ilaria Bellezza, Francesca Riuzzi, Sara Chiappalupi, Cataldo Arcuri, Ileana Giambanco, Guglielmo Sorci, Rosario Donato
Reductive stress is defined as a condition of sustained increase in cellular glutathione/glutathione disulfide and NADH/NAD+ ratios. Reductive stress is emerging as an important pathophysiological event in several diseased states, being as detrimental as is oxidative stress. Occurrence of reductive stress has been documented in several cardiomyopathies and is an important pathophysiological factor particularly in coronary artery disease and myocardial infarction. Excess activation of the transcription factor, Nrf2-the master regulator of the antioxidant response-, consequent in most cases to defective autophagy, can lead to reductive stress...
September 2020: Cellular and Molecular Life Sciences: CMLS
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31991929/salivary-metabolomics-from-diagnostic-biomarker-discovery-to-investigating-biological-function
#74
REVIEW
Alexander Gardner, Guy Carpenter, Po-Wah So
Metabolomic profiling of biofluids, e.g., urine, plasma, has generated vast and ever-increasing amounts of knowledge over the last few decades. Paradoxically, metabolomic analysis of saliva, the most readily-available human biofluid, has lagged. This review explores the history of saliva-based metabolomics and summarizes current knowledge of salivary metabolomics. Current applications of salivary metabolomics have largely focused on diagnostic biomarker discovery and the diagnostic value of the current literature base is explored...
January 26, 2020: Metabolites
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31925963/utility-of-genetic-testing-in-athletes
#75
REVIEW
Belinda Gray, Christopher Semsarian
Athletes are some of the fittest members of our society, yet paradoxically carry an increased risk of sudden cardiac death (SCD). The athlete's underlying risk of SCD in sports may be increased due to a number of underlying structural, arrhythmic and inherited cardiac conditions (ICCs). There are also physiological adaptations, which occur in the cardiovascular system in athletes as a result of high-level athletic activity and may be misinterpreted as pathology. Differentiation of "athlete's heart" from heart disease may be challenging due to the effects of exercise on the electrical and structural cardiac remodeling...
August 2020: Clinical Cardiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31475937/how-do-tendons-adapt-going-beyond-tissue-responses-to-understand-positive-adaptation-and-pathology-development-a-narrative-review
#76
REVIEW
Sean I Docking, Jill Cook
Understanding how tendons adapt to load is crucial to understanding how training can improve performance, minimise the risk of injury and aid rehabilitation. Adaptation is the positive response of an organism or tissue to benefit its function. In tendons, numerous tissue responses to load have been identified in vivo . Changes in tendon dimensions, structure on imaging, mechanical properties, and blood flow have been reported in response to mechanical stimuli. However, research has focused on tissue level changes with little understanding of how changes at the tissue level affect the person, their athletic performance or injury risk...
September 1, 2019: Journal of Musculoskeletal & Neuronal Interactions
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31326742/processing-head-fakes-in-basketball-are-there-ironic-effects-of-instructions-on-the-head-fake-effect-in-basketball
#77
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Iris Güldenpenning, Matthias Weigelt, Wilfried Kunde
Instructions in sports are used to improve athletes' performance. However, instructions can also impair performance if they direct athletes' attention to a to-be-avoided behavior which paradoxically provokes exactly that behavior (ironic effect). The present study investigates the impact of different instructions on the head-fake effect in basketball. Specifically, we asked here if deliberate attempts to ignore the deceptive cues gaze direction and head orientation increase the impact of that information and thus, paradoxically increase the head-fake effect...
July 18, 2019: Human Movement Science
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31297238/novel-insights-of-overtraining-syndrome-discovered-from-the-eros-study
#78
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Flavio A Cadegiani, Claudio Elias Kater
Background: Excessive training and inadequate recovery could cause 'overtraining syndrome' (OTS), which is characterised by underperformance and fatigue. The pathophysiology of OTS is unclear. We aimed to describe novel mechanisms and risk factors associated with OTS, and thereby facilitate its early identification and prevention, from a comprehensive joint qualitative analysis of the findings from all the four arms of the Endocrine and Metabolic Responses on Overtraining Syndrome (EROS) study...
2019: BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine
https://read.qxmd.com/read/31166121/exploring-simulated-driving-performance-among-varsity-male-soccer-players
#79
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mathieu Tremblay, Martin Lavallière, Wayne J Albert, Simon R Boudreau, Michel J Johnson
Background: It is documented that male athletes display riskier behaviors while driving (as well as in life in general) than female athletes and nonathletes. However, the literature has reported that athletes show better driving ability than nonathletes. This paradox between behaviors and abilities motivated the present study to further understand the collision risk of varsity athletes. Objective: The current study estimates the performance differences between varsity male soccer players and male undergraduate nonathletes on (1) a driving task and (2) three perceptual-cognitive tasks (associated with collision risk prediction; i...
June 5, 2019: Traffic Injury Prevention
https://read.qxmd.com/read/30970215/hydrogen-gas-from-clinical-medicine-to-an-emerging-ergogenic-molecule-for-sports-athletes-1
#80
REVIEW
Tyler W LeBaron, Ismail Laher, Branislav Kura, Jan Slezak
H2 has been clinically demonstrated to provide antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects, which makes it an attractive agent in exercise medicine. Although exercise provides a multiplicity of benefits including decreased risk of disease, it can also have detrimental effects. For example, chronic high-intensity exercise in elite athletes, or sporadic bouts of exercise (i.e., noxious exercise) in untrained individuals, result in similar pathological factors such as inflammation, oxidation, and cellular damage that arise from and result in disease...
September 2019: Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology
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