116 research outputs found

    Lifestyle and Epidemiology

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    Lifestyle and Epidemiology - The Double Burden of Poverty and Cardiovascular Diseases in African Populations examines the profile of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) in the rural South African population. The burden of diseases in South Africa is characterized by a combination of poverty-related diseases with emerging NCDs associated with urbanization, industrialization, and a Westernised lifestyle. Chapters in this book examine the effects of poverty, COVID-19, and other social factors on the prevalence of cardiovascular disease, reproductive health, and diabetes in rural South Africa

    Change in the mindset of a paediatric exercise physiologist: A review of fifty years research

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    In this review, the career of a pediatric exercise physiologist (HCGK) is given over a period of almost 50 years. His research was concentrated on the relationship of physical activity (physical education, sport, and daily physical activity) with health and fitness in teenagers in secondary schools. (1) His first experiment was an exercise test on a bicycle ergometer to measure aerobic fitness by estimating physical work capacity at a heart rate of 170 beats/minute (PWC170). (2) Secondly, a randomized control trial (RCT) was performed with an intervention of more intensive physical education (PE) with circuit interval training during three lessons per week over a period of six weeks. (3) Thereafter, a second RCT was performed with an intervention of two extra PE lessons per week over a whole school year. The results of these two RCTs appeared to be small or nonsignificant, probably because the effects were confounded by differences in maturation and the habitual physical activity of these teenagers. (4) Therefore, the scope of the research was changed into the direction of a long-term longitudinal study (the Amsterdam Growth And Health Longitudinal Study). This study included male and female teenagers that were followed over many years to get insight into the individual changes in biological factors (growth, fitness, obesity, hypercholesterolemia, and hypertension) and lifestyle parameters such as nutrition, smoking, alcohol usage, and daily physical activity. With the help of new advanced statistical methods (generalized estimating equations, random coefficient analysis, and autoregression analysis) suitable for longitudinal data, research questions regarding repeated measurements, tracking, or stability were answered. New measurement techniques such as mineral bone density by means of dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) showed that bone can also be influenced by short bursts of mechanical load. This changed his mind: In children and adolescents, not only can daily aerobic exercise of at least 30 to 60 minutes duration increase the aerobic power of muscles, but very short highly intensive bursts of less than one minute per day can also increase the strength of their bones

    Lichamelijke belasting en training bij jongeren

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    Sources of Variation in Longitudinal Assessment of Maximal Aerobic Power in Teenage Boys and Girls: The Amsterdam Growth and Health Study

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    Maximal oxygen uptake (V02 max), generally accepted as a valid method for measuring state and change of aerobic fitness, was repeatedly measured in 93 males and 107 females 5 times over a period of 8 years. A direct measurement was made using a treadmill running test with constant speed (8 km/hr) and increasing slope. Oxygen uptake was analyzed continuously by an open-circuit technique. The reproducibility of V02 max estimated from interperiod correlations resulted in high test-retest correlations of approximately 0.9 in both males and females. Inspection of the longitudinal data from the multiple-longitudinal design with four measurements in three cohorts did not reveal confounding effects, such as time of measurement effects, cohort effects, and drop-out effects. A comparison of the longitudinal data evaluated over four years with data from a comparable control group that was measured once during the four-year period also failed to show any testing effects. In 40% of the males and 50% of the females no leveling-off in V02 max could be demonstrated; that is, there was an increase of more than 150 ml in the last stage of running. A comparison of subjects who showed leveling-off with those who showed no leveling-off supports the idea that in the age range 12-23 years leveling-off is not a prerequisite for reaching a true Vo2 max. Repeated measurement of V02 max, using a maximal running test on a treadmill appears to be a reliable method to describe the individual development of aerobic fitness in males and females in the age range 12-23 years

    Eet- en gewichtsproblemen bij jongeren

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    Lichamelijke activiteit bij jongeren

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    Toekomstvisie over jongeren?

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