Publications by authors named "Overgaard K"

Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to examine how muscle fatigue in the quadriceps affects kicking performance in experienced soccer players.
  • Sixteen male players (5 professionals, 11 amateurs) participated in kicking tests under two conditions: after muscle fatigue and in a control state.
  • Results showed that fatigue reduced kicking speed by about 2.1%, but did not significantly impact shooting accuracy, which saw a slight numerical decline.
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Objective: Children with ADHD often experience functional impairments across various aspects of daily life. This study addresses the dearth of longitudinal research on functional impairment trajectories from preschool to school age in children with symptoms of ADHD and comorbid disorders.

Methods: We investigated the extent to which functional impairments were associated with ADHD symptoms, along with behavioral and anxiety symptoms, from age 3.

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Background: Autism spectrum disorders involve problems with social communication and interaction as well as restricted, repetitive patterns of behaviour and interests. Food selectivity is common among individuals with autism spectrum disorders when their average intellectual ability is below the normal range. This literature review examines the degree to which the same applies for children and adolescents with an intellectual ability level in the normal range.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study explores the role of pericoronary adipose tissue attenuation (PCAT) as a potential marker of inflammation in coronary artery disease by analyzing data from 466 patients who underwent coronary CT angiography (CCTA).
  • - Findings revealed that PCAT measurements varied significantly between calcified and soft plaques, showing a positive association with total and non-calcified plaque burdens, while being negatively linked to calcified plaque burden.
  • - The research concluded that PCAT had a more pronounced effect on plaque characteristics in the absence of different plaque types, indicating its potential importance in understanding coronary artery disease progression.
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The Na-K-ATPase is a critical regulator of ion homeostasis during contraction, buffering interstitial K accumulation, which is linked to muscle fatigue during intense exercise. Within this context, we adopted a recently reported methodology to examine exercise-induced alterations in maximal Na-K-ATPase activity. Eighteen trained healthy young males completed a repeated high-intensity cycling protocol consisting of three periods (EX1-EX3) of intermittent exercise.

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We evaluated associations between muscle phenotype, positional role, and on-ice performance in male U20 Danish national team ice hockey players. Sixteen players (10 forwards, six defensemen) participated in a game with activity tracking. Resting thigh muscle biopsies were analyzed for metabolic enzyme activity and protein expression linked to performance.

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  • Low perceived social support for mothers during pregnancy and early childhood is linked to increased anxiety and ADHD symptoms in their children at ages 3.5 and 8 years.
  • The study analyzed data from the Norwegian Mother, Father, and Child Cohort Study, which assessed maternal social support and used the Child Symptom Inventory-4 to evaluate children’s anxiety and ADHD symptoms.
  • Results showed that low maternal social support is a significant predictor of anxiety symptoms in children both at 3.5 and 8 years old, while also indicating a potential link to ADHD symptoms at 8 years.
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Carbohydrates are critical for high-intensity exercise performance. However, the effects of carbohydrate supplementation on muscle metabolism and performance during short-duration high-intensity intermittent exercise remain inadequately explored. Our aim was to address this aspect in a randomized, counterbalanced, double-blinded crossover design.

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Objective: To improve health conditions among hypogonadal men ≥70 years of age using testosterone undecanoate (TU) injections, progressive strength training, and oral supplements of vitamin D, calcium, and protein.

Methods: This study is a 1-year follow-up of a double-blind RCT lasting 20 weeks, including 148 older men ≥70 years old with low testosterone levels and mobility problems. During 52 weeks, 4 groups received either testosterone therapy (TU) or progressive resistance training (Training), both (Combo), or no intervention (Controls).

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Background: Cardiovascular disease remains the primary cause of morbidity and mortality despite advancements in the treatment of patients with type 2 diabetes. Effective diabetes management extends beyond blood glucose control and includes cardiovascular prevention and treatment. However, the conventional healthcare model often emphasizes single-disease-specific management, leading to fragmented care.

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Background: Due to increasing older populations worldwide, injuries, disabilities and deaths caused by falls among the elderly represent a growing human and societal problem. We aimed to improve health among men of at least 70 years of age with low-normal to low testosterone and mobility problems by using testosterone undecanoate (TU) injections, progressive strength training, and oral supplements of vitamin D, calcium and protein.

Methods: This was a single-centre, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind trial with 148 older men with a median age of 77 (73-81) years, testosterone levels at median 8 (5-9) nmol/L (full range from 1.

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Piperine has been shown to bind to myosin and shift the distribution of conformational states of myosin molecules from the super-relaxed state to the disordered relaxed state. However, little is known about the implications for muscle force production and potential underlying mechanisms. Muscle contractility experiments were performed using isolated muscles and single fibres from rats and mice.

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Maternal anxiety and depression during pregnancy and early childhood have been associated with child anxiety and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). However, previous studies are limited by their short follow-up, few assessments of maternal symptoms, and by not including maternal and child ADHD. The present study aimed to fill these gaps by investigating whether maternal anxiety and depressive symptoms from pregnancy to child age 5 years increase the risk of child anxiety disorders at age 8 years.

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Everyday physical activities, such as walking, are enabled by repeated skeletal muscle contractions and require a well-functioning neuromuscular transmission. In myasthenic disorders, activities of daily living are debilitated by a compromised neuromuscular transmission leading to muscle weakness and fatiguability in patients. To enable physical activity, acetylcholine (ACh) is released repeatedly from the motor nerve, however, the role of the nerve terminals' capacity to sustain ACh release to support repetitive contractions under compromised neuromuscular transmission remains unclear.

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Unlabelled: The main purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of a novel alginate-encapsulated carbohydrate-protein (CHO-PRO ratio 2:1) supplement (ALG) on cycling performance. The ALG, designed to control the release of nutrients, was compared to an isocaloric carbohydrate-only control (CON). Alginate encapsulation of CHOs has the potential to reduce the risk of carious lesions.

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This historical review traces key discoveries regarding K and Na ions in skeletal muscle at rest and with exercise, including contents and concentrations, Na,K-ATPase (NKA) and exercise effects on plasma [K] in humans. Following initial measures in 1896 of muscle contents in various species, including humans, electrical stimulation of animal muscle showed K loss and gains in Na, Cl and H0, then subsequently bidirectional muscle K and Na fluxes. After NKA discovery in 1957, methods were developed to quantify muscle NKA activity via rates of ATP hydrolysis, Na/K radioisotope fluxes, [H]-ouabain binding and phosphatase activity.

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Increases in myofiber extracellular potassium with prolonged contractile activity can potentiate twitch force. Activity-dependent potentiation, another mechanism of force increase in skeletal muscle, has a strong dependence on muscle or sarcomere length. Thus, potassium-mediated twitch potentiation could also be length-dependent.

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Article Synopsis
  • Low-frequency fatigue (LFF) is characterized by a decrease in the ability of muscles to generate force at low frequencies compared to high frequencies during electrical stimulation.
  • In a study with 16 participants, knee extensions were performed to measure how LFF affected the torque-velocity relationship after inducing fatigue through dynamic exercises.
  • Results showed that maximal torque and power significantly decreased after fatigue, while the maximal contraction velocity remained largely unchanged, suggesting that LFF affects muscle power production but not contraction speed during low- and high-frequency exercise.
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Intramuscular lipids are stored as subsarcolemmal or intramyofibrillar droplets with potential diverse roles in energy metabolism. We examined intramuscular lipid utilization through transmission electron microscopy during repeated high-intensity intermittent exercise, an aspect that is hitherto unexplored. Seventeen moderately to well-trained males underwent three periods (EX1-EX3) of 10 × 45-s high-intensity cycling [∼100%-120% Watt (W)] combined with maximal repeated sprints (∼250%-300% W).

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Childhood anxiety and depressive symptoms may be influenced by symptoms of attention deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). We investigated whether parent- and teacher-reported anxiety, depressive and ADHD symptoms at age 3 years predicted anxiety disorders and/or depression in children with and without ADHD at age 8 years. This study is part of the longitudinal, population-based Norwegian Mother, Father and Child Cohort Study.

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Despite the frequent occurrence of congested game fixtures in elite ice hockey, the postgame recovery pattern has not previously been investigated. The purpose of the present study was therefore to evaluate the acute decrements and subsequent recovery of skeletal muscle glycogen levels, muscle function and repeated-sprint ability following ice hockey game-play. Sixteen male players from the Danish U20 national team completed a training game with muscle biopsies obtained before, postgame and following ~38 h of recovery (day 2).

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Preschool screening of attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) has been found too inaccurate to be clinically useful. This may be due to the known instability of ADHD symptoms from preschool onwards, and the use of a single screening only. We hypothesized that by identifying a group of children with persistent ADHD from preschool to school age and repeating the screening, the clinical usefulness of screening would increase.

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Introduction: In recent years, the waiting time for outpatient echocardiography has been increasing. This has potential consequences for patients with de novo systolic heart failure (HF). Thus, screening methods for HF are needed.

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Article Synopsis
  • Perturbations in potassium (K) levels have been linked to muscle fatigue, but they're not the sole reason for decreased force during this fatigue unless combined with changes in sodium (Na) gradients.
  • * Studies show that while high extracellular K levels can lead to force depression, small increases in K can actually enhance muscle performance during less intense activity.
  • * The revised concept suggests K has dual roles: it can both potentiate muscle contractions and contribute to force depression during metabolic stress, where the balance between K and chloride (ClC-1) channel activity influences muscle performance and helps preserve ATP levels.
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We investigated whether prediabetes diagnosed by hemoglobinA1c (HbA1c) or oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) could predict presence and severity of coronary artery disease (CAD) in symptomatic patients. The presence of plaque, stenosis, plaque characteristics, and coronary artery calcium (CAC) were evaluated by coronary CT angiography in 702 patients with suspicion of CAD. Patients were classified by glycemic status using the American Diabetes Association criteria for HbA1c and OGTT, and compared to their respective normal ranges.

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