Results 11 to 20 of about 2,607,286 (345)
Heart Rate Reactivity to Mental Stress in Athlete and Non-Athlete Children [PDF]
Background. Research suggests that exercise training and/or physical fitness may be associated with lower heart rate reactivity and faster recovery from psychosocial stress.
Krisztina Ábel +2 more
doaj +2 more sources
Background: Intense training exercise regimes cause physiological changes within the heart to help cope with the increased stress, known as the “athlete’s heart”.
Ryan A A Bellfield +4 more
semanticscholar +2 more sources
Coaching effectiveness: the coach-athlete relationship at its heart. [PDF]
Coaching has been often viewed as a context within which coaches operate to largely bring about changes in athlete's performance and wellbeing. One key factor to successful outcomes in coaching is the quality of the relationship between coaches and ...
S. Jowett
semanticscholar +3 more sources
Athlete’s ECG Made Easy: A Practical Guide to Surviving Everyday Clinical Practice
Electrocardiogram modifications in athletes are common and usually reflect structural and electrical heart adaptations to regular physical training, known as the athlete’s heart.
Valerio Fanale +10 more
doaj +2 more sources
Athlete's heart is the term given to the complex of structural, functional, and electrical remodelling that accompanies regular athletic training. It is an important physiological adaption which helps athletes perform better in physical tasks than non-athletes and one of the physiological changes that may make a good athlete great.
David L, Prior, Andre, La Gerche
openaire +3 more sources
Assessment of cardiac variables using a new electrocardiography lead system in horses [PDF]
Aim: The objective of this study was to assess a new lead system method to improve electrocardiographic measurement in horses. Materials and Methods: Twenty-two horses with an average age of 8.8±0.8 years were enrolled in this study.
Worakij Cherdchutham +6 more
doaj +1 more source
The athlete's heart is a set of morphological and functional characteristics that develop over time due to sports training. These adaptive changes result in increase in cardiac work efficiency and economy. They are manidested as cardiac muscle hypertrophy and dilation, with accompanying angiogenesis and slower heart rate, that are influenced by ...
Katarina Milutinović +9 more
+8 more sources
Contribution of electrocardiography to the diagnosis of cardiomyopathies and athletic heart syndrome
The review describes the role of electrocardiography in the diagnosis of the most common nonischemic myocardial diseases associated with an increased risk of sudden cardiac death, especially in youth sports.
O. S. Chumakova +3 more
doaj +1 more source
Novel insights into the athlete’s heart: is myocardial work the new champion of systolic function?
Aims We sought to investigate the correlation between speckle-tracking echocardiography (STE)-derived myocardial work (MW) and invasively measured contractility in a rat model of athlete's heart.
M. Tokodi +14 more
semanticscholar +1 more source
A fresh look at sports PSM-systems
The aim of the proposed study is to reveal the correlations between the dynamics of Respiratory Rate (RR) and Heart Rate (HR) during intermittent physical work at maximum power on a cycle ergometer.
Savostyanov Vladimir +2 more
doaj +1 more source

