• Refine Query
  • Source
  • Publication year
  • to
  • Language
  • 1
  • Tagged with
  • 2
  • 2
  • 2
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • 1
  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Impact of an Exercise Program on Stress, Fatigue, and Quality of Life for Individuals Living with Primary Immunodeficiency Disease

Sowers, Kerri 01 January 2018 (has links)
Background: There are over 300 Primary Immunodeficiency diseases (PID) that are a result of a genetic or idiopathic dysfunction of any aspect of the immune system. These conditions result in a higher frequency of infections, autoimmune conditions, or malignancies. Moderate intensity exercise is thought to help the immune system, while high intensity exercise may have a negative impact on immune function. The impact of exercise on individuals with an impaired immune system due to PID is not yet understood. Purpose: The purpose of this study was to investigate whether a low to moderate intensity exercise program would have an effect on stress, fatigue, and quality of life (QoL) for individuals diagnosed with PID. Methods: 34 participants were included in this eight-week, mixed-methods, randomized controlled trial, either as part of the control group, or as part of the exercise intervention group. Participants completed pre- and post-study outcome measures, reflective journaling, and a post-study interview. Results: There were no statistically significant differences between the groups for the outcome measures, infection incidence, or need for non-routine medical care. There was a clinically significant decline in the Physical Component Summary score of the SF-36v2 for the control group at the end of the study. The scores for the SF-36v2, for all participants, were below normative scores for all domains, at the beginning and end of the study. Four main themes emerged from the qualitative interviews: living with a ‘new normal’, the challenges of living with a chronic disease, facing the stigma of a chronic disease, and wanting to exercise, but were too exhausted to do so. Conclusions: Individuals with a diagnosis of PID have lower QoL scores as compared to population norms. They face high levels of stress, overwhelming fatigue, social isolation, and decreased emotional well-being. Exercise programs for this patient population did not result in increased infections or need for non-routine medical care but did result in emotional implications that need to be considered. Healthcare providers need to address emotional well-being and provide coping strategies. Exercise programs should be designed with a slow, methodical ramp-up to avoid increasing fatigue or stress, while exercise goals must be highly achievable and realistic. Physical therapists should collaborate with other healthcare professionals for a more holistic and interprofessional approach to working with patients with a diagnosis of PID.
2

Effet de la cadence de pédalage sur les paramètres de l’oxygénation musculaire et cérébrale lors de l’exercice d’intensité modérée et élevée / Effect of pedal cadence on the parameters of muscle and brain oxygenation during moderate and heavy exercise

Zorgati, Houssem 03 October 2014 (has links)
Au laboratoire comme sur le terrain, le choix de la cadence lors de l’exercice de pédalage est un élément important dans la réalisation d’un exercice. De nombreux travaux ont porté sur l’effet de la cadence de pédalage sur différents aspects tels que la performance, les paramètres cardiorespiratoires, la participation du métabolisme « anaérobie » et le recrutement musculaire. Cependant, très peu de travaux ont étudié l’effet de la cadence de pédalage sur la disponibilité et l’utilisation d’O2 au niveau musculaire et cérébral. L’objectif principal de cette thèse était de comprendre les effets de la cadence de pédalage sur la disponibilité en O2 ainsi que l’utilisation d’O2 au niveau musculaire et cérébral. Le but de nos trois plans expérimentaux était d’étudier d’une part l’effet de la cadence de pédalage sur l’hétérogénéité de la déoxygénation musculaire lors de l’exercice modéré et d’autre part l’effet de la cadence sur l’oxygénation musculaire et cérébrale et sur la performance lors de l’exercice intense chez des sujets non entraînés ainsi que chez des sujets entraînés à l’endurance.Ce travail nous a permis de montrer que, lors de l’exercice d’intensité modérée, V ̇O2 de l’organisme entier et l’hétérogénéité de la déoxygénation musculaire étaient plus élevées à cadence élevée qu’à cadence faible, bien que la déoxygénation n’était pas modifiée par la cadence de pédalage chez les sujets non entraînés à l’endurance. D’autre part, lors de l’exercice intense mené jusqu’à l’épuisement, la performance était améliorée à 40 rpm par rapport à 100 rpm chez les sujets non entraînés tandis qu’aucune différence significative n’était observée entre les deux cadences chez les triathlètes. De plus, l’extraction d’O2 au niveau du vastus lateralis était dépendante de la cadence de pédalage chez les sujets non entraînés mais ne l’était pas chez les sujets entraînés à l’endurance. Enfin, nous avons observé un effet de la cadence de pédalage sur l’oxygénation cérébrale et en particulier une possible élévation de la disponibilité en O2 au niveau cérébral à faible cadence de pédalage chez les deux populations. Pour conclure, ce travail nous a permis de mettre en évidence des différences liées à l’aptitude aérobie des sujets et à l’intensité de l’exercice dans les réponses de l’oxygénation cérébrale et musculaire et de la performance lors d’exercices effectués à différentes cadences. / Choosing the pedalling cadence during the cycling exercise, in the laboratory as well as on the field, is a crucial element in fulfilling an exercise. Many studies have examined the effect of pedal cadence on various aspects such as performance, cardiorespiratory parameters, the participation of the “anaerobic” metabolism and muscle recruitment. However, few studies have investigated the effect of pedal cadence on the O2 availability and its utilization in the muscle as well as in the brain. This is why the main objective of this thesis was to understand this subject which is underdeveloped. The aim of our three experimental procedures was on one hand to study the effect of pedal cadence on the heterogeneity of the muscle’s deoxygenation during moderate exercise. On the other hand, to study the effects of pedal cadence on muscle and cerebral oxygenation and also on the performance during heavy exercise in untrained subjects, as well as in endurance-trained subjects.This work allows us to show that at moderate-intensity exercise, whole body V ̇O2 and the heterogeneity of muscle deoxygenation were higher at high cadence than at a lower one, even if the deoxygenation was not altered by the pedalling cadence in non-endurance-trained subjects. On the other hand, during intense exercise performed until exhaustion, the performance improved at 40 rpm than at 100 rpm in untrained subjects, while no significant difference was observed between the two cadences among triathletes. In addition, the O2 extraction in the vastus lateralis depended on the pedal cadence in untrained subjects and the opposite in endurance-trained subjects. Finally, we observed an effect of pedal cadence on cerebral oxygenation and in particular a possible rise in the availability of O2 in the brain on a lower cadence in both population levels. In conclusion, this work has allowed us to highlight the differences in the aerobic fitness of the subjects and in the intensity of the exercise in brain and muscle oxygenation responses and performance during exercises performed at different cadences.

Page generated in 0.132 seconds