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In this book, leading figures in the field of Developmental Origins
of Health and Disease provide up-to-date information from human
clinical trials, cohorts, and animal physiology experiments to
reveal the interdependence between parental obesity and health of
the offspring. Obesity of the mother and father produces obesity in
their offspring, so we are caught up in an intergenerational cycle,
which means that even our children's future health is in peril.
This book gives a timely and much-needed synthesis of the
mechanisms, potential targets of future interventions, and the
challenges that need to be overcome in order to break the
intergenerational cycle of obesity. This has profound implications
for the way in which scientific, clinical and health policy
activities are to be directed in order to combat the so-called
epidemic of obesity, as well as diabetes, cancer and cardiovascular
disease. The book will be of interest to students, clinicians,
researchers and health policy makers who are either seeking an
introduction to the area of Developmental Origins of Health and
Disease or have a specific interest in the pathogenesis of obesity.
In this book, leading figures in the field of Developmental Origins
of Health and Disease provide up-to-date information from human
clinical trials, cohorts, and animal physiology experiments to
reveal the interdependence between parental obesity and health of
the offspring. Obesity of the mother and father produces obesity in
their offspring, so we are caught up in an intergenerational cycle,
which means that even our children's future health is in peril.
This book gives a timely and much-needed synthesis of the
mechanisms, potential targets of future interventions, and the
challenges that need to be overcome in order to break the
intergenerational cycle of obesity. This has profound implications
for the way in which scientific, clinical and health policy
activities are to be directed in order to combat the so-called
epidemic of obesity, as well as diabetes, cancer and cardiovascular
disease. The book will be of interest to students, clinicians,
researchers and health policy makers who are either seeking an
introduction to the area of Developmental Origins of Health and
Disease or have a specific interest in the pathogenesis of obesity.
Exercise is the act of increasing metabolic rate for the purpose of
enhancing physical fitness. Exercise can be one of the most
stressful physiological responses that the body undertakes. With
exercise, there are increases in metabolic rate, heart rate, blood
flow (hyperemia), respiration, and heat production. The increased
metabolic requirement during exercise is well met by an increased
blood flow (functional hyperemia) and oxygen supply to the
exercising tissue, which is regulated by multiple local and
systemic mechanisms. The local mechanisms (factors) are responsible
for mediating the muscle homeostasis and vascular conductance to
match the increased metabolic requirement, whereas the systemic
mechanisms are responsible for the maintenance of blood pressure
and global cardiovascular homeostasis, including the increase in
and redistribution of cardiac output, which is mainly mediated by
sympathetic activation. For instance, the substantial decreases in
vascular resistance and resultant large increase in blood flow
during exercise require higher blood pressure and more cardiac
output, such that the metabolically active muscle can be perfused
with adequate blood flow. This book will provide an overview of the
cardiovascular responses to exercise under physiological conditions
as well as some pathological circumstances.
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