Publications by authors named "Anderson Haro"

Article Synopsis
  • Maintenance of glycemic and lipemic balance can slow down diabetic kidney disease, and this study investigates the effects of resistance training (RT) and resistance training with blood flow restriction (RT+BFR) on patients with stage-2 chronic kidney disease (CKD).* -
  • Over six months, patients engaged in RT or RT+BFR showed improvements in glucose regulation, hormone mediators of glucose uptake, and reductions in inflammation and fibrosis.* -
  • Both RT and RT+BFR were similarly effective in managing glycemic levels, suggesting they can be valuable non-drug treatments for patients with CKD.*
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Aerobic training (AT) promotes several health benefits that may attenuate the progression of obesity associated diabetes. Since AT is an important nitric oxide (NO) inducer mediating kidney-healthy phenotype, the present study is aimed at investigating the effects of AT on metabolic parameters, morphological, redox balance, inflammatory profile, and vasoactive peptides in the kidney of obese-diabetic Zucker rats receiving L-NAME (N(omega)-nitro-L-arginine methyl ester). Forty male Zucker rats (6 wk old) were assigned into four groups ( = 10, each): sedentary lean rats (CTL-Lean), sedentary obese rats (CTL-Obese), AT trained obese rats without blocking nitric oxide synthase (NOS) (Obese+AT), and obese-trained with NOS block (Obese+AT+L-NAME).

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigated how different genotypes of the angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) affect the response of chronic kidney disease patients to long-term resistance training.
  • Over 300 patients were divided into four groups based on their ACE genotype and whether they participated in resistance training or had a control regimen.
  • Results showed that the DD genotype benefited more in blood pressure control, while those with allele I saw greater gains in muscle mass, suggesting that genotyping could help tailor rehabilitation strategies in hemodialysis clinics.
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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to evaluate the effects of resistance training (RT) and low-load resistance training with blood flow restriction (RT+BFR) on various health outcomes in patients with stage two chronic kidney disease (CKD).
  • A 6-month randomized controlled trial was conducted with 90 hypertensive CKD patients, randomly assigned to one of three groups: control, RT, or RT+BFR, with both exercise groups training three times a week.
  • Results showed that both RT and RT+BFR effectively reduced blood pressure, fat mass, oxidative stress markers, and preserved kidney function, but RT+BFR was linked to lower exercise discomfort, making it a promising non-drug approach for managing CKD symptoms.
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Purpose: This study aimed to verify the effect of 6 months of periodized resistance training (RT) with and without blood flow restriction (BFR) in patients with stage 2 chronic kidney disease (CKD) on glomerular filtration rate (GFR), uremic parameters, cytokines, and klotho-fibroblast growth factor 23 (FGF23) axis.

Methods: A total of 105 subjects were randomized in three groups of 35 each: control (CTL), RT, and RT + BFR. A first visit was required for an anamnesis to evaluate the number of medications and anthropometric measurements (body weight, height, and body mass index).

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Patients in maintenance hemodialisys (HD) present sleep disorders, increased inflammation, unbalanced redox profiles, and elevated biomarkers representing endothelial dysfunction. Resistance training (RT) has shown to mitigate the loss of muscle mass, strength, improve inflammatory profiles, and endothelial function while decreasing oxidative stress for those in HD. However, the relation between those factors and sleep quality are inadequately described.

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Chronic kidney disease (CKD) patients present L-arginine (L-arg) deficiency and L-arg supplementation has been used as a treatment. In addition, sarcopenia is another common problem in CKD population, resistance training (RT) is one of the conservative strategies developed to prevent CKD progression, and however there are no evidences of a combination of these two strategies to treat CKD outcomes. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effects of oral L-arg supplementation combined with RT in an experimental model of CKD.

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Resistance exercise (RE) can be an excellent modality for glycemic control. Studies have demonstrated that a single RE session can reduce glycemia in subjects with or without diabetes. Little is known about the dose-response effect of RE on glycemic control.

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Metabolic syndrome is a cluster of metabolic risk factors such as obesity, diabetes and cardiovascular diseases. Mitochondria is the main site of ATP production and its dysfunction leads to decreased oxidative phosphorylation, resulting in lipid accumulation and insulin resistance. Our group has demonstrated that kinins can modulate glucose and lipid metabolism as well as skeletal muscle mass.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study examines how exercise and caloric restriction impact immune cells in adipose tissue during obesity, particularly after a high-fat diet.
  • Chronic swimming training increased NK cells and certain cytokines, while caloric restriction improved the CD4+/CD8+ cell ratio and MCP-1 levels in the same tissue.
  • The findings suggest that both interventions change immune cell profiles differently, and combining exercise with caloric restriction is more effective in fighting obesity than doing either one alone.
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The kallikrein-kinin system (KKS) has been previously linked to glucose homeostasis. In isolated muscle or fat cells, acute bradykinin (BK) stimulation was shown to improve insulin action and increase glucose uptake by promoting glucose transporter 4 translocation to plasma membrane. However, the role for BK in the pathophysiology of obesity and type 2 diabetes remains largely unknown.

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The Kallikrein-Kinin System (KKS) has been implicated in several aspects of metabolism, including the regulation of glucose homeostasis and adiposity. Kinins and des-Arg-kinins are the major effectors of this system and promote their effects by binding to two different receptors, the kinin B2 and B1 receptors, respectively. To understand the influence of the KKS on the pathophysiology of obesity and type 2 diabetes (T2DM), we generated an animal model deficient for both kinin receptor genes and leptin (obB1B2KO).

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To investigate the antihypertensive effects of conventional resistance exercise (RE) on the blood pressure (BP) of hypertensive subjects, 15 middle-aged (46 ± 3 years) hypertensive volunteers, deprived of antihypertensive medication (reaching 153 ± 6/93 ± 2 mm Hg systolic/diastolic BP after a 6-week medication washout period) were submitted to a 12-week conventional RE training program (3 sets of 12 repetitions at 60% 1 repetition maximum, 3 times a week on nonconsecutive days). Blood pressure was measured in all phases of the study (washout, training, detraining). Additionally, the plasma levels of several vasodilators or vasoconstrictors that potentially could be involved with the effects of RE on BP were evaluated pre- and posttraining.

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