scholarly article | Q13442814 |
P50 | author | Lars Gullestad | Q63256598 |
P2093 | author name string | Kari Nytrøen | |
P2860 | cites work | Vagal reinnervation in the long term after orthotopic heart transplantation | Q73109443 |
Long-term cardiopulmonary exercise performance after heart transplantation | Q73114364 | ||
Physical activity patterns and exercise performance in cardiac transplant recipients | Q73200535 | ||
Effect of alterations in blood volume on cardiac function during maximal exercise | Q73885549 | ||
Abnormal heart rate recovery after exercise as a reflection of an abnormal chronotropic response | Q73887937 | ||
Sympathetic reinnervation of the sinus node and exercise hemodynamics after cardiac transplantation | Q73889091 | ||
Predictive factors of maximal aerobic capacity after cardiac transplantation | Q73948835 | ||
High VO2max with no history of training is primarily due to high blood volume | Q74239272 | ||
Cardiac versus noncardiac limits to exercise after heart transplantation | Q74267701 | ||
Exercise standards for testing and training: a statement for healthcare professionals from the American Heart Association | Q74582158 | ||
Stroke volume does not plateau during graded exercise in elite male distance runners | Q77105983 | ||
Serial assessment of sympathetic reinnervation after orthotopic heart transplantation. A longitudinal study using PET and C-11 hydroxyephedrine | Q77312993 | ||
[Physical activity and health--recommendations] | Q77720856 | ||
Chronotropic competence in endurance trained heart transplant recipients: heart rate is not a limiting factor for exercise capacity | Q77958731 | ||
Clinical predictors of exercise capacity 1 year after cardiac transplantation | Q78805279 | ||
Effects of physical training on cardiovascular control after heart transplantation | Q79269794 | ||
Exercise responses following heart transplantation: 5 year follow-up | Q80115240 | ||
Assessing exercise performance after heart transplantation | Q80291210 | ||
Effects of cardiac rehabilitation program on exercise capacity and chronotropic variables in patients with orthotopic heart transplant | Q80814114 | ||
Efficacy of a home-based exercise program for orthotopic heart transplant recipients | Q80980617 | ||
Different evolutions in heart rate variability after heart transplantation: 10-year follow-up | Q81145469 | ||
Exercise limitation in trained heart and kidney transplant recipients: central and peripheral limitations | Q81504176 | ||
Aerobic interval training improves VO2 peak in coronary artery disease patients; no additional effect from hyperoxia | Q81599880 | ||
Exercise training improves aerobic capacity and skeletal muscle function in heart transplant recipients | Q83606838 | ||
Chronotropic responses to exercise in heart transplant recipients: 1-yr follow-up | Q84567055 | ||
One year of high-intensity interval training improves exercise capacity, but not left ventricular function in stable heart transplant recipients: a randomised controlled trial | Q85546058 | ||
Short form 36 (SF-36) health survey: normative data from the general Norwegian population | Q31944265 | ||
Limiting factors for maximum oxygen uptake and determinants of endurance performance | Q33824421 | ||
Heart-rate recovery immediately after exercise as a predictor of mortality | Q33878188 | ||
Exercise following heart transplantation | Q34041310 | ||
Absence of parasympathetic control of heart rate after human orthotopic cardiac transplantation | Q34449016 | ||
The endothelium in clinical cardiac transplantation | Q34567289 | ||
Exercise training in solid organ transplant recipients: a systematic review and meta-analysis. | Q34567865 | ||
Aerobic high-intensity intervals improve VO2max more than moderate training | Q34578445 | ||
Making the case for skeletal myopathy as the major limitation of exercise capacity in heart failure | Q34667465 | ||
Cardiac allograft vasculopathy: prevention and treatment options | Q34784773 | ||
High-intensity interval training to maximize cardiac benefits of exercise training? | Q34988587 | ||
Quality of life after heart transplantation: are things really better? | Q35090429 | ||
Exercise after heart transplantation. | Q35299014 | ||
A review of the stroke volume response to upright exercise in healthy subjects | Q35332728 | ||
The pathologic changes in long-term heart and lung transplant survivors | Q35349923 | ||
Impact of exercise training on arterial wall thickness in humans. | Q35599845 | ||
Exercise testing in asymptomatic adults: a statement for professionals from the American Heart Association Council on Clinical Cardiology, Subcommittee on Exercise, Cardiac Rehabilitation, and Prevention | Q36184306 | ||
Exercise rehabilitation in cardiac transplantation patients: a comprehensive review | Q36263308 | ||
Responses of the cardiac transplant patient to exercise and training | Q36292367 | ||
Patterns and predictors of quality of life at 5 to 10 years after heart transplantation | Q36402070 | ||
Autonomic nervous system interaction with the cardiovascular system during exercise | Q36454587 | ||
Exercising with a denervated heart after cardiac transplantation. | Q36621906 | ||
Treatment of allograft vasculopathy in heart transplantation | Q36655174 | ||
Quality of life following organ transplantation | Q36777920 | ||
Cardiac allograft vasculopathy: recent developments | Q37143722 | ||
Aerobic interval training versus continuous moderate exercise as a treatment for the metabolic syndrome: a pilot study. | Q37421933 | ||
The diseasome of physical inactivity--and the role of myokines in muscle--fat cross talk | Q37596777 | ||
High-intensity aerobic exercise training improves the heart in health and disease | Q37664454 | ||
Impact of physical activity, cardiorespiratory fitness, and exercise training on markers of inflammation | Q37856163 | ||
Exercise therapy for cardiac transplant recipients | Q37872418 | ||
The forgotten face of regular physical exercise: a 'natural' anti-atherogenic activity | Q37897619 | ||
Effects of physical activity on cardiovascular disease | Q37947403 | ||
Effects of exercise training in heart transplant recipients: a meta-analysis | Q37957671 | ||
The effect of functional performance, respiratory function and osteopenia on the quality of life after heart transplantation. | Q53198945 | ||
Cardiac allograft vasculopathy: a review. | Q55067225 | ||
Incomplete sympathic reinnervation of the orthotopically transplanted human heart: Observation up to 13 years after heart transplantation | Q60607086 | ||
Functional significance of cardiac reinnervation in heart transplant recipients | Q60607100 | ||
Signs of vagal reinnervation 4 years after heart transplantation in spectra of heart rate variability | Q60607123 | ||
Effect of High Intensity Exercise on Peak Oxygen Uptake and Endothelial Function in Long-Term Heart Transplant Recipients | Q61875227 | ||
Plasma catecholamines and heart rate at the beginning of muscular exercise in man | Q68449404 | ||
Evidence for structural sympathetic reinnervation after orthotopic cardiac transplantation in humans | Q70135762 | ||
Reinnervation of the transplanted human heart as evidenced from heart rate variability studies | Q70856656 | ||
Influence of post-surgery time after cardiac transplantation on exercise responses | Q71449085 | ||
Exercise capacity of heart transplant recipients: the importance of chronotropic incompetence | Q71861914 | ||
Serial assessment of exercise capacity after heart transplantation | Q72008903 | ||
Endurance athletes' stroke volume does not plateau: major advantage is diastolic function | Q72376902 | ||
Functional and neurochemical evidence for partial cardiac sympathetic reinnervation after cardiac transplantation in humans | Q72885817 | ||
Should high-intensity-aerobic interval training become the clinical standard in heart failure? | Q38026009 | ||
Physical activity, cardiorespiratory fitness, and exercise training in primary and secondary coronary prevention | Q38074787 | ||
Physical exercise and its effects on coronary artery disease | Q38075325 | ||
Exercise limitation following transplantation. | Q38110753 | ||
Effect of high-intensity interval training on progression of cardiac allograft vasculopathy | Q39374116 | ||
High-intensity interval training improves peak oxygen uptake and muscular exercise capacity in heart transplant recipients | Q39567915 | ||
Association of cardiorespiratory fitness with characteristics of coronary plaque: assessment using integrated backscatter intravascular ultrasound and optical coherence tomography. | Q39743375 | ||
Health-related quality of life and exercise tolerance in recipients of heart transplants and left ventricular assist devices: a prospective, comparative study | Q39823509 | ||
Superior cardiovascular effect of aerobic interval training versus moderate continuous training in heart failure patients: a randomized study. | Q40206551 | ||
Depression and quality of life in patients living 10 to 18 years beyond heart transplantation | Q40363947 | ||
High intensity aerobic interval exercise is superior to moderate intensity exercise for increasing aerobic capacity in patients with coronary artery disease | Q40506087 | ||
Does transplantation produce quality of life benefits? A quantitative analysis of the literature | Q40877594 | ||
Behavior of stroke volume at rest and during exercise in human beings | Q41012714 | ||
Heart rate dynamics in heart transplantation patients during a treadmill cardiopulmonary exercise test: a pilot study. | Q42167888 | ||
Prediction of long-term prognosis in 12 169 men referred for cardiac rehabilitation | Q43414913 | ||
Effect of sympathetic reinnervation on cardiac performance after heart transplantation | Q43731019 | ||
Treatment and prophylaxis of cardiac allograft vasculopathy | Q43822413 | ||
The heart rate response to exercise and circulating catecholamines in heart transplant recipients | Q43865810 | ||
A controlled trial of exercise rehabilitation after heart transplantation | Q44228165 | ||
Muscular exercise capacity and body fat predict VO(2peak) in heart transplant recipients | Q44465739 | ||
Cardiac-allograft vasculopathy | Q44566067 | ||
Re-innervation after heart transplantation: a multidisciplinary study | Q45058185 | ||
Sympathetic reinnervation after heart transplantation, assessed by iodine-123 metaiodobenzylguanidine imaging, and heart rate variability | Q45079898 | ||
Sympathetic reinnervation, exercise performance and effects of beta-adrenergic blockade in cardiac transplant recipients | Q45080579 | ||
Effect of high-volume and -intensity endurance training in heart transplant recipients | Q45166780 | ||
Time course of physical reconditioning during exercise rehabilitation late after heart transplantation | Q45287467 | ||
Association between gastrointestinal symptoms and health-related quality of life after heart transplantation. | Q45579539 | ||
The Registry of the International Society for Heart and Lung Transplantation: Twenty-eighth Adult Heart Transplant Report--2011. | Q45776006 | ||
Comparison of the chronotropic response to exercise and heart rate recovery in predicting cardiovascular mortality. | Q46011172 | ||
Two-year follow-up of quality of life in patients referred for heart transplant | Q46137046 | ||
Quality of life in adult survivors greater than 10 years after pediatric heart transplantation | Q46837603 | ||
Predictors of exercise capacity and the impact of angiographic coronary artery disease in heart transplant recipients | Q47302075 | ||
Evolution of heart rate control after transplantation: conduction versus autonomic innervation | Q47359364 | ||
Influence of the exercise protocol on peak VO2 in patients after heart transplantation | Q47688597 | ||
Cardiac allograft vasculopathy compared by intravascular ultrasound sonography: everolimus to mycophenolate mofetil--one single-center experience. | Q47798248 | ||
The effect of early cardiac rehabilitation on health-related quality of life among heart transplant recipients and patients with coronary artery bypass graft surgery | Q48593327 | ||
Relationship between functional capacity and quality of life in heart transplant patients | Q48612894 | ||
A high-intensity exercise program improves exercise capacity, self-perceived health, anxiety and depression in heart transplant recipients: a randomized, controlled trial | Q48788955 | ||
Health-related quality of life evolution in patients after heart transplantation. | Q50769140 | ||
The relationship between depressive symptoms and anxiety and quality of life and functional capacity in heart transplant patients. | Q50896458 | ||
Comparison of hospital-supervised exercise versus home-based exercise in patients after orthotopic heart transplantation: effects on functional capacity, quality of life, and psychological symptoms. | Q50897069 | ||
Exercise capacity after heart transplantation: influence of donor and recipient characteristics. | Q51008023 | ||
[Self-assessed health and psychological symptoms after heart transplantation]. | Q51111250 | ||
Stroke volume does not plateau in female endurance athletes. | Q51340101 | ||
Serial assessment of peak VO2 and VO2 kinetics early after heart transplantation. | Q51645442 | ||
Partial normalization of the heart rate response to exercise after cardiac transplantation: frequency and relationship to exercise capacity. | Q51694354 | ||
Health-related quality of life in long-term survivors after heart and lung transplantation: a prospective cohort study. | Q51849365 | ||
Health-related quality of life after cardiac transplantation: results of a UK National Survey with Norm-based Comparisons. | Q51890421 | ||
Ten years of "extended" life: quality of life among heart transplantation survivors. | Q51938788 | ||
Aerobic interval training reduces blood pressure and improves myocardial function in hypertensive patients. | Q53043140 | ||
P433 | issue | 4 | |
P304 | page(s) | 78-90 | |
P577 | publication date | 2013-12-01 | |
P1433 | published in | World journal of transplantation | Q27725045 |
P1476 | title | Exercise after heart transplantation: An overview | |
P478 | volume | 3 |
Q47408680 | A hybrid cardiac rehabilitation is as effective as a hospital-based program in reducing chest pain intensity and discomfort |
Q88092047 | Anatomical visualization of neural course and distribution of anterior ascending aortic plexus |
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Q58754939 | Clinical features and determinants of VO in heart transplant recipients |
Q37143330 | Exercise And Heart Failure: Advancing Knowledge And Improving Care |
Q48012337 | Exercise Capacity and Functional Performance in Heart Failure Patients Supported by a Left Ventricular Assist Device at Discharge From Inpatient Rehabilitation |
Q64233594 | Exercise Training and Heart Failure: A Review of the Literature |
Q26471613 | Exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation in heart transplant recipients |
Q36333896 | Exercise-based cardiac rehabilitation in heart transplant recipients. |
Q54956283 | High-Intensity Interval Training in Heart Transplant Recipients: A Systematic Review with Meta-Analysis. |
Q50044027 | Improvements in exercise capacity following cardiac transplantation in a patient born with double inlet left ventricle |
Q57494737 | Obesity in patients with end-stage heart failure |
Q58476243 | Physician Practice Patterns and Barriers to Counselling on Physical Activity in Solid Organ Transplant Recipients |
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