Many recent studies on the effects of regular exercise on the heart, coronary arteries and the balance between haemostasis and fibrinolysis suggest several mechanisms that are able to explain the epidemiologically well-documented association of habitual physical activity with a reduced risk of cardiovascular disease. Based on a review of current evidence, it is proposed that i) the haemodynamic adaptation of an aerobically-trained heart is an important cardioprotective mechanism, ii) the importance of exercise-induced effects on the coronary vessels may currently be somewhat underestimated, and iii) the importance of training-related changes in the haemostatic-fibrinolytic balance is equivocal at present, since the relative intensity of exe...
Nowadays, there are robust clinical and pathophysiological evidence supporting the beneficial effect...
Abstract: Regular exercise training has potent and powerful protective effects against the developme...
The association between physical activity and health wasrecognized as early as the fifth century BC ...
Some of the benefits of physical activity may result from effects on hemostasis. However, the increa...
Cardiovascular diseases exact human and economic costs that are growing year after year. A great dea...
Cardiovascular (CV) disease (CVD) remains the leading cause of major morbidity and CVD- and all-caus...
Regular exercise training confers beneficial effects to the heart as well as to the entire body. Thi...
Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are no. 1 killer in the western world. We shall present here our resu...
Significance: Regular exercise training can reduce myocardial damage caused by acute ischemia/reperf...
Epidemiological and biological plausibility studies support a cause-and-effect relationship between ...
SUMMARY Physical training is thought to be a stimulus for coronary vascular growth and coronary coll...
Substantial evidence has established the value of high levels of physical activity, exercise trainin...
Multiple epidemiological studies document that habitual physical activity reduces the risk of athero...
© 2017, University of Kragujevac, Faculty of Science. All rights reserved. Over the last decade, the...
textabstractThe present study was undertaken in order to elucidate the pathogenesis of exercise-rela...
Nowadays, there are robust clinical and pathophysiological evidence supporting the beneficial effect...
Abstract: Regular exercise training has potent and powerful protective effects against the developme...
The association between physical activity and health wasrecognized as early as the fifth century BC ...
Some of the benefits of physical activity may result from effects on hemostasis. However, the increa...
Cardiovascular diseases exact human and economic costs that are growing year after year. A great dea...
Cardiovascular (CV) disease (CVD) remains the leading cause of major morbidity and CVD- and all-caus...
Regular exercise training confers beneficial effects to the heart as well as to the entire body. Thi...
Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) are no. 1 killer in the western world. We shall present here our resu...
Significance: Regular exercise training can reduce myocardial damage caused by acute ischemia/reperf...
Epidemiological and biological plausibility studies support a cause-and-effect relationship between ...
SUMMARY Physical training is thought to be a stimulus for coronary vascular growth and coronary coll...
Substantial evidence has established the value of high levels of physical activity, exercise trainin...
Multiple epidemiological studies document that habitual physical activity reduces the risk of athero...
© 2017, University of Kragujevac, Faculty of Science. All rights reserved. Over the last decade, the...
textabstractThe present study was undertaken in order to elucidate the pathogenesis of exercise-rela...
Nowadays, there are robust clinical and pathophysiological evidence supporting the beneficial effect...
Abstract: Regular exercise training has potent and powerful protective effects against the developme...
The association between physical activity and health wasrecognized as early as the fifth century BC ...