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Specialty: General Medicine

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Total 107525 results found since Jan 2013.

Features of the performance exposure in girls involved in cyclic and acyclic sports
J Med Life. 2021 Jan-Mar;14(1):105-110. doi: 10.25122/jml-2020-0054.ABSTRACTAccording to the definition adopted by the international biological program, physical performance is characterized by maximum oxygen consumption (MOC). Profession, lifestyle, and sport affect the value of the MOC. For anatomy and physiology, oxygen delivery to muscle tissue depends on the state of the respiratory and cardiovascular system, the amount and composition of blood. In this case, the leading role belongs to the cardiac activity, namely to the magnitude of the shock and minute volumes of blood in working conditions. High values of MOC and,...
Source: Journal of Medicine and Life - March 26, 2021 Category: General Medicine Authors: Timur Cherkesov Cherim Ingushev Anna Konopleva Radmir Cherkessov Magomed Gairbekov Azamat Zhukov Source Type: research

School Sports Are Starting Again: Know the Signs of Concussion
SUNDAY, Aug. 28, 2022 -- As high school sports get underway this fall, sports medicine specialists remind athletes, parents and coaches that concussions can be challenging to diagnose. Dr. Sean Bradley, a primary care sports medicine physician at...
Source: Drugs.com - Daily MedNews - August 28, 2022 Category: General Medicine Source Type: news

Kinesiophobia and Return to Sports After Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction.
Abstract Anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction is typically recommended for patients who wish to return to aggressive athletic activity. Unfortunately, reconstructive knee surgery is not a guarantee that all patients will return to their preinjury level of function. A recent meta-analysis including 48 studies showed that after a mean follow-up of 41 months, 82% of participants had returned to some kind of athletic activity but only 63% returned to their preinjury level of participation and a disappointing 44% returned to competitive sports. The reasons why some athletes have been unsuccessful in returnin...
Source: Connecticut Medicine - March 1, 2015 Category: Journals (General) Authors: Medvecky MJ, Nelson S Tags: Conn Med Source Type: research

Athletes access to, attitudes towards and experiences of help-seeking for mental health: a scoping review protocol
Introduction Athletes are not immune to mental health issues but are less likely to seek help than non-athletes and experience barriers including lack of access to services, lack of knowledge as to how to access services and negative past experiences for help-seeking. Formal (eg, university counsellors, general practitioners and psychologists) and semi-formal (eg, academic tutor, sports coach and physiotherapist) sources of support provided in healthcare, the sport context and higher education are key places for athletes to seek help for mental health, and there is a need to synthesise the evidence on athletes’ acces...
Source: BMJ Open - April 6, 2023 Category: General Medicine Authors: Brown, K. R., Quinton, M. L., Tidmarsh, G., Cumming, J. Tags: Open access, Sports and exercise medicine Source Type: research

Water Outperforms Sports Drinks for Young Athletes
FRIDAY, April 14, 2017 -- Water is a better bet than sports drinks for young athletes, sports medicine specialists say. Most youngsters don ' t exert themselves at an intensity or duration that requires the extra sugar and salt contained in sports...
Source: Drugs.com - Daily MedNews - April 14, 2017 Category: Journals (General) Source Type: news

Pilot investigation of the oxygen demands and metabolic cost of incremental shuttle walking and treadmill walking in patients with cardiovascular disease
Conclusions The energetic demands of shuttle walking were fundamentally different from those of treadmill walking and should not be directly compared. We warn against estimating the metabolic cost of the incremental shuttle-walking test using the current walking-speed equations.
Source: BMJ Open - September 16, 2014 Category: Journals (General) Authors: Almodhy, M., Beneke, R., Cardoso, F., Taylor, M. J. D., Sandercock, G. R. H. Tags: Open access, Cardiovascular medicine, Sports and exercise medicine Research Source Type: research

Relationship between a daily injury risk estimation feedback (I-REF) based on machine learning techniques and actual injury risk in athletics (track and field): protocol for a prospective cohort study over an athletics season
Introduction Two-thirds of athletes (65%) have at least one injury complaint leading to participation restriction (ICPR) in athletics (track and field) during one season. The emerging practice of medicine and public health supported by electronic processes and communication in sports medicine represents an opportunity for developing new injury risk reduction strategies. Modelling and predicting the risk of injury in real-time through artificial intelligence using machine learning techniques might represent an innovative injury risk reduction strategy. Thus, the primary aim of this study will be to analyse the relationship ...
Source: BMJ Open - May 16, 2023 Category: General Medicine Authors: Dandrieux, P.-E., Navarro, L., Blanco, D., Ruffault, A., Ley, C., Bruneau, A., Chapon, J., Hollander, K., Edouard, P. Tags: Open access, Sports and exercise medicine Source Type: research