Publications by authors named "Sebastien Ratel"

With the increasing opportunities for people with disabilities to engage in competitive Para sports, it becomes imperative to understand the injury consequences that may impact both sports participation and daily life activities. This narrative review aims to examine the intrinsic and extrinsic risk factors inherent in overhead and wheelchair summer Para sports, while also exploring prospective avenues for implementing prevention strategies. By understanding the injury epidemiology in this cohort of Para athletes, this review aims to explore the intricate interplay between the athletes' underlying disability with sport-specific factors, such as how wheelchair use might amplify injury susceptibility.

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Background: Neuromuscular function is considered as a determinant factor of endurance performance during adulthood. However, whether endurance training triggers further neuromuscular adaptations exceeding those of growth and maturation alone over the rapid adolescent growth period is yet to be determined.

Objective: The present study investigated the concurrent role of growth, maturation, and endurance training on neuromuscular function through a 9-month training period in adolescent triathletes.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Early differences in neuromuscular function were found between strength-trained (wrestling) and endurance-trained (triathlon) adolescent athletes, highlighting that such variations can emerge by early adolescence.
  • - The study involved 23 triathletes, 12 wrestlers, and 12 untrained male adolescents, measuring knee extensor torque and muscle activation through various techniques like isometric contraction and EMG.
  • - Results indicated that wrestlers had higher knee extensor torque and specific muscle architectural advantages compared to triathletes and untrained individuals, suggesting that strength training could lead to distinct neuromuscular characteristics even in young athletes.
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To identify biomarkers that precede the decline of human function and independence during the lifespan, two important concepts have been introduced in recent decades: sarcopenia and dynapenia. While the former is originally focused on skeletal muscle loss, the latter is on maximal strength loss. Although the dynapenia concept implies the inclusion of skeletal muscle power, in practical terms, this has not been specifically addressed.

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Purpose: Many modern-day children are at risk of pediatric dynapenia (muscle weakness). We examined the effects of a 12-week resistance training (RT) program on neuromuscular function and body composition parameters in pubertal children with a risk of dynapenia.

Methods: Twelve children (13.

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Purpose: Persistent inward calcium and sodium currents (PICs) are crucial for initiation and maintenance of motoneuron firing, and thus muscular force. However, there is a lack of data describing the effects of fatiguing exercise on PIC activity in humans. We simultaneously applied tendon vibration and neuromuscular electrical stimulation (VibStim) before and after fatiguing exercise.

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Young obese are generally stronger than their typically developing counterparts. Strength differences could be partly ascribed to nervous adaptations, due to the loading effect of carrying overweight. We hypothesized that central adaptations of the muscles highly involved in weight bearing, i.

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The aim of the present study was to examine whether combining strength and endurance training would promote better improvements in neuromuscular characteristics and functional abilities than endurance training alone in obese adolescent girls enrolled in a weight-reduction program. Twenty-four obese adolescent girls (12-15 years) volunteered to participate in a 9-month training program. Participants were allocated into two groups following either (i) combined training (endurance + strength; E+ST) or (ii) endurance training (ET) program.

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The present study aimed to evaluate the effects of age and sex on the rating of perceived exertion (RPE) during high-intensity exercise and determine whether mechanical and physiological parameters could be predictors of RPE during childhood and adolescence. Forty-three boys and 36 girls performed a 60-s all-out test on a rowing ergometer and were categorized by age group (10.0-11.

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Article Synopsis
  • * It found that both groups showed significant improvements in vertical jump heights and reactive strength within the first 3 minutes post-warm-up, with increases of 16.9% for drop jumps and 12.0% for squat jumps.
  • * However, the results indicated that maturity status did not influence jump performance changes after the warm-up, suggesting that the benefits of warm-up apply to both age groups similarly.
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French rowing federation reduced the competition distance to 1,500 and 1,000 m in rowers under 16- (U16) and 14-year-old (U14) respectively, to prepare them progressively to the Olympic 2,000 m distance in under 18-year-old (U18). This study aimed to check the hypothesis that relative aerobic (%E) and anaerobic (%E) energy contributions would be comparable between the competition distances since the more oxidative profile of younger age categories could offset the greater anaerobic contribution induced by shorter rowing races. Thirty-one 12- to 17-year-old competitive rowers performed a race of 2,000, 1,500, or 1,000 m on a rowing ergometer according to their age category.

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Purpose: The aim of this study was to investigate the time course of maximal isometric finger flexor force and blood acid-base balance during repeated simulated matches in world-class judokas.

Methods: Seven 21- to 28-year-old world-class female judokas (including Olympic and World Championship medalists) repeated four 4-minute judo combats interspersed by 15 minutes of passive recovery. Maximal voluntary isometric finger flexor contraction (MVIC) force was measured in both hands after warm-up and immediately after each combat using a handgrip dynamometer.

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We investigated the acute cardiac consequences of a long-duration (>5 h) adventure race in adolescent athletes from evaluations of left ventricular (LV) strains and myocardial work. Twenty trained male adolescents (i.e.

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The prevalence of obesity in the pediatric population has become a major public health issue. Indeed, the dramatic increase of this epidemic causes multiple and harmful consequences, Physical activity, particularly physical exercise, remains to be the cornerstone of interventions against childhood obesity. Given the conflicting findings with reference to the relevant literature addressing the effects of exercise on adiposity and physical fitness outcomes in obese children and adolescents, the effect of duration-matched concurrent training (CT) [50% resistance (RT) and 50% high-intensity-interval-training (HIIT)] on body composition and physical fitness in obese youth remains to be elucidated.

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Purpose: To determine sex-related differences in oxygen consumption (V˙O2) recovery after high-intensity exercise during childhood and adolescence.

Methods: Forty-two boys and 35 girls (10-17 y) performed a 60-second all-out test on a rowing ergometer. Postexercise V˙O2 recovery was analyzed from (1) the V˙O2 recovery time constant obtained from a biexponential model (τ1V˙O2) and (2) excess postexercise oxygen consumption calculated over a period of 8 minutes (EPOC8) and until τ1V˙O2 was reached (EPOCτ1).

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Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates the biochemical effects of a long adventure race (>5h) on hydration, blood electrolytes, and kidney function in adolescent athletes aged 14 to 17.
  • Twenty male participants completed a 68.5 km race while monitoring their fluid intake and undergoing blood tests before, after, and 24 hours post-race.
  • Results showed stable blood sodium levels and no significant kidney function changes, indicating the race did not lead to dehydration or harmful effects on kidney function in the participants.
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The present study investigated the acute effects of a mixed-modality, long-duration adventure race on pulmonary function in adolescent athletes. Twenty male adolescents aged 14 to 17 years volunteered to participate in a wilderness adventure race of 68.5-km.

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Purpose: This study tested the hypothesis that prepubertal boys, but not untrained men, would exhibit a similar post-exercise parasympathetic reactivation as well-trained adult male endurance athletes.

Methods: Twelve prepubertal boys (12.3 ± 1.

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Study Objectives: Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is one of the most common pediatric rheumatic disease. However, sleep alteration associated with this autoimmune disease remain unclear. We aimed in this systematic review and meta-analysis to compare sleep duration, quality, and architecture in JIA subjects with those in their healthy peers.

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Purpose: To characterize the acute effects of a long-duration adventure race on knee extensor (KE) fatigue and the knee functional ratio in adolescent athletes.

Methods: Twenty trained male adolescents (aged 14-17 y) performed an adventure race of 68.5 km.

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Purpose: The aims of the present study were to determine during childhood and adolescence (i) the effect of sex on non-oxidative energy production, quantified by the accumulated oxygen deficit (AOD), and (ii) the influence of AOD on high-intensity performance.

Methods: Thirty-nine boys and 35 girls aged 10-17 years performed a 60 s all-out test on a rowing ergometer to determine AOD and mean power output (MPO). Multiplicative allometric modelling was used to assess the concurrent effects of lean body mass (LBM) and age on AOD.

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The aim of the present study was to check whether the M-wave and H-reflex recruitment curves differ between prepubertal boys and men. Eleven boys (9-11 yr) and eleven men (18-35 yr) were magnetically stimulated at the tibial nerve in a prone position. M-wave and H-reflex maximal amplitudes (H M ; H /M ), thresholds, regression slopes (H ; M ; H /M ) were extracted from M-wave and H-reflex recruitment curves and compared between the two age groups.

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Young athletes must contend with the constraints of elite sports on top of school commitments and the physiological processes associated with adolescence. This study assessed week and weekend sleep and schedule of activities in elite adolescent rugby players during the in-season competitive phase compared with age-matched non-athlete controls. 32 adolescents (GR: 16 elite rugby players, GC: 16 controls) from the same boarding school filled out a daily schedule of activities and a sleep diary, and wore a multichannel electroencephalogram for 14 days.

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