Filtered By:
Condition: Alcoholism

This page shows you your search results in order of relevance. This is page number 5.

Order by Relevance | Date

Total 17377 results found since Jan 2013.

Physical activity paradox: could inflammation be a key factor?
CONCLUSION: This study indicates that the relationship between physical activity and hs-CRP depends on the setting of physical activity, with lower hs-CRP related to leisure time physical activity and higher hs-CRP related to occupational physical activity. The results suggest that systemic inflammation may explain the physical activity paradox.PMID:35961763 | DOI:10.1136/bjsports-2022-105429
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - August 12, 2022 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Joshua Buron Feinberg Anne M øller Volkert Siersma Helle Bruunsgaard Ole Steen Mortensen Source Type: research

Internal consistency reliability of mental health questionnaires in college student athletes
CONCLUSIONS: The recommended mental health questionnaires were generally reliable for use with college student athletes. To truly determine the validity of the cut-off scores on these self-report questionnaires, future studies need to compare the questionnaires to a structured clinical interview to determine the discriminative abilities.PMID:36878667 | DOI:10.1136/bjsports-2021-105136
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - March 6, 2023 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Daniel J Taylor Alisa Huskey Kelly N Kim Sarah E Emert Sophie Wardle-Pinkston Alex Auerbach John M Ruiz Michael A Grandner Rachel Webb Michelle Skog Thomas Milord Pac-12 Mental Health Coordinating Unit Source Type: research

The changing circumstance of atrial fibrillation ‐ progress towards precision medicine
Abstract The prevalence of atrial fibrillation (AF) in the general population is between 1% and 2% in the developed world and is higher in men than in women. The arrhythmia occurs much more commonly in the elderly, and the estimated lifetime risk of developing AF is one in four for men and women aged 40 years and above. Projected data from multiple population‐based studies in the USA and Europe predict a two‐ to threefold increase in the number of AF patients by 2060. The high lifetime risk of AF and increased longevity underscore the important public health burden posed by this arrhythmia worldwide. AF has multiple ae...
Source: Journal of Internal Medicine - March 29, 2016 Category: Internal Medicine Authors: A. J. Camm, I. Savelieva, T. Potpara, G. Hindriks, L. Pison, C. Blömstrom‐Lundqvist Tags: Review Source Type: research

An anonymous online survey of the views and attitudes of medical students and junior doctors towards physical activity (pa) teaching and promotion
Conclusions This study found that clinical medical students and recent graduates rarely include questions or advice about PA in routine medical consultations. Responders tended to under prioritise physical inactivity as a mortality risk factor, and this may reflect a lack of adequate teaching and emphasis on physical inactivity within medical schools. Fear of offending of alienating patients was the most frequently cited barrier to giving PA advice. This may be due to the inexperience of juniors, or view that labelling someone as physically inactive is stigmatising. This study reaffirms previous findings of low levels of t...
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - June 10, 2013 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Bates, S., Kipps, C. Tags: POSTERS: POSTER EXCERCISE MEDICINE Source Type: research

Peptic Ulcer and Exercise
Abstract Relationships between peptic ulcer and physical activity have as yet received little attention. The prevalence of ulceration is high in racehorses and sled dogs, particularly during periods of competition. In humans, some occupational comparisons show an increased risk among manual workers, but it remains difficult to separate effects of work-related activity from social class and attendant influences of smoking, excessive alcohol consumption, shift work, and other stressors. Two studies of leisure activity point to some benefit from moderate physical activity, one finding a reduced risk of gastric ulcers...
Source: Sports Medicine - June 9, 2016 Category: Sports Medicine Source Type: research

Exercise and the Link Between Alcohol and Cancer, Mortality Exercise and the Link Between Alcohol and Cancer, Mortality
Regular exercise may help lessen the risk of cancer and all-cause mortality associated with alcohol consumption, a new study reports.British Journal of Sports Medicine
Source: Medscape Today Headlines - May 10, 2017 Category: Consumer Health News Tags: Family Medicine/Primary Care Journal Article Source Type: news

Pilot survey regarding "the green folder" - an educator-designed secondary school return to learn protocol after a sport-related concussion
Conclusions The "Green Folder" incorporating RTL steps and a daily class-by-class accommodation sign off by a guidance counsellor, appears to have perceived efficacy for SRC students. Further research will determine whether such a user-centred RTL protocol results in a more efficacious implementation of expert recommendations about concussion management, worthy of widespread dissemination. Competing interests None.
Source: British Journal of Sports Medicine - May 25, 2017 Category: Sports Medicine Authors: Carson, J. D., Safwan, A., Kraft, S. A., Kuwahara, N., Moser, S. E., Rabinovitch, S. T., Mansoora, Q.-u.-A., Jegatheesan, V., Moineddin, R., Fremont, P. Tags: Abstracts Source Type: research

Exercise as Medicine for Mental and Substance Use Disorders: A Meta-review of the Benefits for Neuropsychiatric and Cognitive Outcomes
ConclusionOur panoramic meta-overview suggests that exercise can be an effective adjunctive treatment for improving symptoms across a broad range of mental disorders.
Source: Sports Medicine - September 19, 2019 Category: Sports Medicine Source Type: research

Changes in Anthropometry, Upper Body Strength and Nutrient Intake in Professional Australian Football Players During a Season.
Authors: Bilsborough JC, Greenway K, Livingston S, Cordy J, Coutts AJ Abstract The purpose of this study was to examine the seasonal changes in body composition, nutrition, and upper body strength in professional Australian Football (AF) players. A prospective longitudinal study examined changes in anthropometry (body mass, fat-free soft tissue mass (FFSTM) and fat mass (FM)) via dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DXA) five times during an AF season (start-preseason, mid-preseason, start-inseason, mid-inseason, end-inseason) in 45 professional AF players. Dietary intakes and strength (bench press and bench pull) wer...
Source: International Journal of Sports Physiology and Performance - July 30, 2015 Category: Sports Medicine Tags: Int J Sports Physiol Perform Source Type: research

Body composition, physical fitness, physical activity and nutrition in Polish and Spanish female students of sports sciences
ConclusionsCurricula should be adapted, in Poland to promote a healthier lifestyle and in Spain to improve body composition and physical fitness.RésuméObjectifsIl est important d’étudier les différences de composition corporelle, de forme physique et de modes de vie entre des étudiants universitaires de différents pays pour élaborer des recommandations spécifiques à chaque pays en matière de santé promotion lors de la transition vers l’université. L’objectif de cette étude était d’analyser les différences de composition corporelle, de forme physique et de mode de vie entre étudiants en sciences des ...
Source: Science and Sports - June 20, 2019 Category: Sports Medicine Source Type: research

Knowledge of addiction medicine among internal medicine residents and medical students.
CONCLUSIONS: Knowledge of addiction medicine can be improved for medical students and residents in an academic medicine department. Significant improvements were observed following completion of eight hours of interactive didactics. PMID: 23544288 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
Source: Tennessee Medicine - March 1, 2013 Category: Internal Medicine Authors: Brown AT, Kolade VO, Staton LJ, Patel NK Tags: Tenn Med Source Type: research

Knowledge and Attitudes of Lifestyle Medicine-Based Care in a Military Community
CONCLUSIONS: Despite an overall low level of awareness of lifestyle medicine, most respondents expressed interest in a lifestyle medicine approach to health care, with food/nutrition and sleep ranked as the most important domains. Lower levels of education may be a potential barrier to patient willingness to engage in lifestyle medicine care. Service members in combat arms occupational specialties may represent a potential target population for smoking cessation interventions. Further research with a larger sample more proportionately inclusive of all military service branches is needed.PMID:34254645 | DOI:10.1093/milmed/usab279
Source: Military Medicine - July 13, 2021 Category: International Medicine & Public Health Authors: Katrina Monti Jonathan D Monti Drew Thomas Source Type: research

Bio Intelligence: 5 Ways the Age of Information Will Democratize Modern Medicine
On July 13th 2013 at 7:15 pm I was sitting in a Wegman’s café eating dinner with two startup founders I was mentoring when I received a phone call from a dermatologist. He had removed a mole from my 10-year-old daughter’s arm a week earlier. My daughter and my six-year-old son sat at the table next to us chatting, eating, and playing games on their tablets. With just three words –“This is bad”—our entire world changed. We never saw it coming, we had no information, we were immediately at the mercy of strangers, and the normal we had known was irrevocably shattered in an instant, never to return. Within two wee...
Source: Society for Participatory Medicine - July 31, 2016 Category: Journals (General) Authors: Nanette Mattox Tags: Book Review Source Type: news