Search results for "conditioning"

showing 10 items of 632 documents

Effects of Added Resistance Training on Physical Fitness, Body Composition, and Serum Hormone Concentrations During Eight Weeks of Special Military T…

2015

A high volume of military training has been shown to compromise muscle strength development. We examined effects of added low-volume resistance training during special military training (ST) period, which took place after basic training period. Male conscripts (n = 25) were assigned to standardized ST with added resistance training group (TG, n = 13) and group with standardized ST only (control) (CG, n = 12). Standardized ST with added resistance training group performed 2 resistance training sessions per week for 8 weeks: hypertrophic strength (weeks 1-3), maximal strength (weeks 4-6) and power training (weeks 7-8). Maximal strength tests, load carriage performance (3.2 km, 27 kg), and hor…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyAdolescentPhysical fitnessPhysical Therapy Sports Therapy and RehabilitationUpper ExtremityWeight-BearingYoung AdultAnimal sciencestrength trainingHumansMedicineTestosteroneOrthopedics and Sports MedicineMuscle Strengthta315FinlandAbdominal MusclesTraining periodbusiness.industryBack Musclesload carriageAdded resistanceResistance TrainingGeneral MedicineMilitary PersonnelLower ExtremityPhysical Fitnessmaximal strengthconcurrent trainingBody CompositionExercise TestPhysical EndurancePhysical therapybusinessPhysical Conditioning HumanHormoneJournal of Strength and Conditioning Research
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Effects of training on regional substrate oxidation in the hearts of ageing rats.

1989

23-month-old male rats were trained by running for 20 weeks. The oxidation rates of succinate, glutamate+malate, palmitoylcarnitine, and pyruvate and the activities of lactate dehydrogenase, citrate synthase, isocitrate dehydrogenase and cytochrome oxidase were measured in the subendocardium and subepicardium and in the right ventricle. Regional differences of substrate oxidation rates in the myocardium of old sedentary or trained rats were less than in young rats, suggesting that regional differences in the cardiac work load disappear during ageing. Training did not improve oxidation rates, in contradiction to some previous results.

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyAgingCitrate (si)-SynthaseElectron Transport Complex IVchemistry.chemical_compoundLactate dehydrogenaseInternal medicinePhysical Conditioning AnimalmedicineCitrate synthaseCytochrome c oxidaseAnimalsPalmitoylcarnitinebiologyL-Lactate DehydrogenaseMyocardiumBody WeightGlutamate receptorHeartRats Inbred StrainsOrgan SizeIsocitrate DehydrogenaseRatsmedicine.anatomical_structureIsocitrate dehydrogenaseEndocrinologychemistryAgeingVentriclebiology.proteinGeriatrics and GerontologyOxidation-Reduction
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Acute social defeat stress increases the conditioned rewarding effects of cocaine in adult but not in adolescent mice.

2015

Stressful experiences modify activity in areas of the brain involved in the rewarding effects of psychostimulants. In the present study we evaluated the influence of acute social defeat (ASD) on the conditioned rewarding effects of cocaine in adolescent (PND 29-32) and adult (PND 50-53) male mice in the conditioned place preference (CPP) paradigm. Experimental mice were exposed to social defeat in an agonistic encounter before each session of conditioning with 1mg/kg or 25mg/kg of cocaine. The effects of social defeat on corticosterone levels were also evaluated. Adult mice exposed to ASD showed an increase in the conditioned reinforcing effects of cocaine. Only these mice developed cocaine…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyAgingClinical BiochemistryMale miceToxicologyBiochemistryExtinction PsychologicalSocial defeatBehavioral Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundCocaine-Related DisordersMiceCocaineRewardCorticosteroneInternal medicineAgonistic behaviourmedicineAnimalsBiological PsychiatryPharmacologyDose-Response Relationship DrugExtinction (psychology)Conditioned place preferenceAggressionEndocrinologychemistryAnesthesiaConditioningConditioning OperantPsychologyCorticosteronepsychological phenomena and processesAgonistic BehaviorStress PsychologicalPharmacology, biochemistry, and behavior
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Effects of age and life-time physical training on fibre composition of slow and fast skeletal muscle in rats.

1987

The effects of age and endurance training on muscle fibre characteristics were studied in a slow (m. soleus, MS) and in a fast (m. rectus femoris, MRF) skeletal muscle. Wistar rats at ages of 1, 2, 4, 10, and 24 months were used as experimental animals. The trained rats were put to run on a motor-driven treadmill 5 d/wk beginning from the age of 1 month. The body weights of the animals increased continuously throughout their lives. The muscle weights increased up to the age of 10 months, after which they tended to decrease. The trained adult rats had lower body weights as well as lower muscle weights than the untrained adult rats. The amount of the intramuscular lipid decreased with age, es…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyAgingPhysiologyClinical BiochemistryPhysical exerciseEndurance trainingPhysiology (medical)Internal medicinePhysical Conditioning AnimalMyocyteMedicineAnimalsTreadmillFibre compositionbusiness.industryHistocytochemistryMusclesBody WeightLife timeSkeletal muscleRats Inbred StrainsAnatomyOrgan SizeRatsEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structurebusinessPhosphofructokinasePflugers Archiv : European journal of physiology
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Voluntary wheel running protects against the increase in ethanol consumption induced by social stress in mice

2020

Abstract Previous studies have shown that exposure to social defeat (SD), a model of social stress, produces a long-term increase in the consumption of ethanol, most likely through an increase in the neuroinflammation response. The aim of the present study was to evaluate whether exposure to physical activity in the form of voluntary wheel running (VWR) could block the increase in ethanol consumption and the neuroinflammatory response induced by social stress. Mice were exposed to either 4 sessions of repeated social defeat (RSD) or a non-stressful experience. During the whole procedure, half of the mice were exposed to controlled physical activity, being allowed 1 h access to a low-profile…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyAlcohol DrinkingSocial InteractionSelf AdministrationPhysical exerciseStriatumMotor ActivityToxicologySocial defeatMice03 medical and health scienceschemistry.chemical_compound0302 clinical medicinePhysical Conditioning AnimalInternal medicineAvoidance LearningmedicineAnimalsPharmacology (medical)030212 general & internal medicinePharmacologySocial stressEthanolEthanolbusiness.industryCorpus StriatumMice Inbred C57BLPsychiatry and Mental healthPsicobiologiaEndocrinologyPsicologiachemistryTurnoverWheel runningSelf-administrationbusinessStress Psychological030217 neurology & neurosurgeryDrug and Alcohol Dependence
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The Novel μ-Opioid Receptor Antagonist GSK1521498 Decreases Both Alcohol Seeking and Drinking: Evidence from a New Preclinical Model of Alcohol Seeki…

2015

Distinct environmental and conditioned stimuli influencing ethanol-associated appetitive and consummatory behaviors may jointly contribute to alcohol addiction. To develop an effective translational animal model that illuminates this interaction, daily seeking responses, maintained by alcohol-associated conditioned stimuli (CSs), need to be dissociated from alcohol drinking behavior. For this, we established a procedure whereby alcohol seeking maintained by alcohol-associated CSs is followed by a period during which rats have the opportunity to drink alcohol. This cue-controlled alcohol-seeking procedure was used to compare the effects of naltrexone and GSK1521498, a novel selective μ-opioi…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyAlcohol Drinkingmedia_common.quotation_subjectNarcotic AntagonistsDrug-Seeking BehaviorDrug Evaluation PreclinicalReceptors Opioid muPoison controlAlcoholContext (language use)Choice BehaviorNaltrexonechemistry.chemical_compoundSpecies SpecificitymedicineAnimalsPsychiatrymedia_commonPharmacologyDose-Response Relationship DrugAddictionAbstinenceTriazolesNaltrexoneRatsPsychiatry and Mental healthDisease Models AnimalchemistryAlcohol DeterrentsAnesthesiaIndansCommentaryConditioning OperantBlood alcohol contentBlood Alcohol ContentCuesPsychologyAlcohol-Related DisordersReinforcement Psychologymedicine.drugAlcohol DeterrentsNeuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology
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Are the effects of the antidepressants amitriptyline, maprotiline, and fluoxetine on inhibitory avoidance state-dependent?

2005

Abstract State-dependent learning (SDL) is a phenomenon in which the retrieval of newly acquired information is possible if the subject is in the same physiological state as during the encoding phase. SDL makes it possible to separate the effects of drugs per se on learning from the effects due to changes in drug state during the task. The present work was designed to investigate whether the antidepressants amitriptyline (30 mg/kg), maprotiline (25 mg/kg), and fluoxetine (15 mg/kg) produce SDL of the inhibitory avoidance conditioning in male and female CD1 mice. In three separate experiments, independent groups were used for each pharmacological treatment and for each sex using a 2 × 2 expe…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyAmitriptylinePharmacologyMiceBehavioral Neurosciencechemistry.chemical_compoundSex FactorsFluoxetineAvoidance LearningmedicineAnimalsAmitriptylineNeurotransmitterPsychiatryMaprotilineFluoxetineBehavior AnimalAntidepressive AgentsInhibition PsychologicalMaprotilinechemistryFacilitationConditioningFemaleSerotoninReuptake inhibitorPsychologymedicine.drugBehavioural Brain Research
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Effects of experimental type 1 diabetes and exercise training on angiogenic gene expression and capillarization in skeletal muscle.

2006

Diabetes alters microvascular structure and function and is a major risk factor for cardiovascular diseases. In diabetic skeletal muscle, impaired angiogenesis and reduced VEGF-A expression have been observed, whereas in healthy muscle exercise is known to have opposite effects. We studied the effects of type 1 diabetes and combined exercise training on angiogenic mRNA expression and capillarization in mouse skeletal muscle. Microarray and real-time PCR analyses showed that diabetes altered the expression of several genes involved in angiogenesis. For example, levels of proangiogenic VEGF-A, VEGF-B, neuropilin-1, VEGFR-1, and VEGFR-2 were reduced and the levels of antiangiogenic thrombospon…

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyAngiogenesisNeovascularization PhysiologicMice Inbred StrainsBiologyBiochemistryDiabetes Mellitus ExperimentalNeovascularizationMiceInternal medicineDiabetes mellitusPhysical Conditioning AnimalGene expressionGeneticsmedicineAnimalsMuscle SkeletalMolecular BiologyRegulation of gene expressionType 1 diabetesNeovascularization PathologicSkeletal muscleRibonuclease Pancreaticmedicine.diseaseCapillariesDisease Models Animalmedicine.anatomical_structureEndocrinologyDiabetes Mellitus Type 1Gene Expression RegulationAngiogenesis Inducing Agentsmedicine.symptomAngiogenesis Inducing AgentsBiotechnologyFASEB journal : official publication of the Federation of American Societies for Experimental Biology
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Endurance training and antioxidants of lung

1984

Mice and rats were adjusted to daily treadmill training programs, which were heavy enough to increase the oxidative capacity of skeletal muscles. Endurance training did not affect the activities of catalase and glutathione peroxidase and the concentration of vitamin E in the lungs of mice and rats. Thus increased ventilation and oxygen utilization induced by exercise training do not modify lung antioxidants, in contrast to hyperoxia and hypoxia.

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyAntioxidantmedicine.medical_treatmenteducationApparent oxygen utilisationMiceCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceEndurance trainingPhysical Conditioning AnimalInternal medicineAnimalsVitamin EMedicineLungMolecular BiologyPharmacologyHyperoxiachemistry.chemical_classificationGlutathione Peroxidasebiologybusiness.industryVitamin EGlutathione peroxidaseRats Inbred StrainsCell Biologyrespiratory systemHypoxia (medical)CatalaseRatsrespiratory tract diseasesEndocrinologychemistryCatalasePhysical Endurancebiology.proteinMolecular Medicinemedicine.symptombusinessOxidation-ReductionExperientia
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Effects of high-intensity circuit training, low-intensity circuit training and endurance training on blood pressure and lipoproteins in middle-aged o…

2013

Background The aim of this study was to determine the physiological effects of an high-intensity circuit training (HICT) on several cardiovascular disease risk factors in healthy, overweight middle-aged subjects, and to compare the effects of HICT to traditional endurance training (ET) and low-intensity circuit training (LICT). Methods Fifty-eight participants (ages 61±3.3 yrs, BMI 29.8±0.9) were randomly assigned to one of the three exercise treatment groups: HICT, LICT and ET. The three groups exercised three times per week, 50 min per session for 12 weeks. Baseline and after intervention anthropometric characteristics: body weight (BW), fat mass (FM); blood pressure: diastolic (DBP) and …

Malemedicine.medical_specialtyApolipoprotein BHdlEndocrinology Diabetes and MetabolismsportsLipoproteinsClinical BiochemistryPhysical ExertionBlood PressureClinical nutritionOverweightCardiovascular disease risk factorsCircuit trainingLdlEndocrinologyEndurance trainingInternal medicinemedicineHumansExercise physiologyExerciseApolipoproteins ATriglyceridesAgedApolipoproteins BBiochemistry medicalCircuit trainingbiologybusiness.industryResistance training strength and conditioningResearchBiochemistry (medical)Cholesterol HDLCholesterol LDLAnthropometryMiddle AgedOverweightExercise TherapyBlood pressureEndocrinologyAdipose Tissuebiology.proteinsports.sportlipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)medicine.symptombusinessLipids in health and disease
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