0000000000234768

AUTHOR

James S. Skinner

showing 2 related works from this author

Adverse metabolic response to regular exercise: Is it a rare or common occurrence?

2012

Background. Individuals differ in the response to regular exercise. Whether there are people who experience adverse changes in cardiovascular and diabetes risk factors has never been addressed. Methodology/Principal Findings. An adverse response is defined as an exercise-induced change that worsens a risk factor beyond measurement error and expected day-to-day variation. Sixty subjects were measured three times over a period of three weeks, and variation in resting systolic blood pressure (SBP) and in fasting plasma HDL-cholesterol (HDL-C), triglycerides (TG), and insulin (FI) was quantified. The technical error (TE) defined as the within-subject standard deviation derived from these measur…

MalePhysical fitnesslcsh:MedicineBlood Pressure030204 cardiovascular system & hematologyCardiovascularBiochemistry0302 clinical medicineRisk FactorsMedicineInsulinlcsh:ScienceMultidisciplinaryCongenital Heart DiseaseFastingMiddle Agedadverse response3. Good healthExercise TherapyNephrologyCardiovascular DiseasesCohortHypertensionMedicineFemalePublic HealthExercise prescriptionResearch ArticleAdultmedicine.medical_specialtyDiabetes riskExercise training03 medical and health sciencesInternal medicineDiabetes mellitusDiabetes MellitusHumansRisk factorSports and Exercise MedicineBiologyExerciseTriglyceridesAgedbusiness.industrylcsh:RCholesterol HDL030229 sport sciencesmedicine.diseaseAtherosclerosisEpidemiologic StudiesEndocrinologyBlood pressureMetabolismMetabolic DisordersBasal metabolic ratelcsh:QPhysiotherapy and RehabilitationPreventive MedicineBasal Metabolismbusiness
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Effect of exercise training on in vitro LDL oxidation and free radical-induced hemolysis: the HERITAGE Family Study.

2006

Oxidant stress and overproduction of reactive oxygen species (ROS) contribute to the development of cardiovascular disease. Oxidative modifications of low-density lipoproteins (LDL) are thought to play an early and critical role in atherogenesis. LDL oxidation can be reproduced in vitro, but results usually show a large interindividual variation not entirely explained by the environment. Free radical-induced hemolysis is also proposed to reveal the overall antioxidant capacity. The roles of genetic factors and exercise on the variability of both measures were investigated. The study was conducted in 146 healthy individuals from 28 families participating in a 20-week exercise-training progra…

AdultMalemedicine.medical_specialtyErythrocytesAdolescentFree RadicalsPhysiologyClinical BiochemistryOxidative phosphorylationBiochemistryHemolysisInternal medicineMedicineHumansMolecular BiologyExerciseGeneral Environmental Sciencechemistry.chemical_classificationReactive oxygen speciesbusiness.industryFamily aggregationCell BiologyMiddle Agedmedicine.diseaseLipidsIn vitroHemolysisLipoproteins LDLAntioxidant capacityEpidemiologic StudiesEndocrinologyBiochemistrychemistryHealthy individualsGeneral Earth and Planetary SciencesFemalebusinessOxidation-ReductionAntioxidantsredox signaling
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