View clinical trials related to Exercise Training.
Filter by:At menopausal transition, the risk of cardiovascular diseases increases. This is partly due to aging, but largely also the loss of estrogen, which has many positive effects on the circulation and protects against cardiovascular diseases. It has been suggested that the loss of estrogen may have a negative impact on the otherwise well-documented health promoting effects of exercise training, and that the time after menopause may be crucial for the effect of exercise training on the vascular function, and therefore also for the risk of thrombosis. Literature regarding the effect of exercise training on the risk of thrombosis is limited, and especially in women. The purpose of the present study is to investigate whether the same effects of exercise training in relation to thrombosis is achieved if the exercise is initiated early compared to late after menopause. The aim is to provide knowledge-based recommendations regarding exercise. Teams sports will be used as the training intervention, because team sports benefits physical health and also includes a social element.
The primary aim of this proposal is to identify changes in the volume of highly metabolic organs (liver, kidneys, and brain) that occur as a physiological adaptation to exercise training and lower the resting energy expenditure. Secondary aims are to identify changes in the metabolic efficiency of muscle in low levels of physical activity and evaluate the effects on components of total daily energy expenditure including the sleeping metabolic rate (SMR) and diet induced thermogenesis (DIT).
The purpose of this study is to compare the impact of augmenting exercise intensity and augmenting exercise frequency on peak work rate. Participants will complete exercise tests and provide 8 skeletal muscle samples following a within-subjects randomized crossover design utilizing single-leg cycling. Both training periods will be 4 weeks long and skeletal muscle biopsies will be collected from both legs before and after each training period. All exercise sessions will be supervised, take place in the investigator's laboratory, and occur on stationary bikes.
Regular exercise training has shown to improve exercise capacity in patients with cardiovascular disease. The feasibility and transferability of exercise training in a community based cardiovascular rehabilitation setting is currently less well investigated. The objective of this study is to translate regular exercise training into a community based setting. A 6 months training intervention program with lifestyle counseling is performed, with both supervised training in rehabilitation centres as well as home based training. The aim of the project is to implement this program for a wider patient population and to improve exercise capacity, diastolic function as well as cardiometabolic parameters.