295 results on '"Winfried, Banzer"'
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2. Implementierungstreue der Lebensstilberatung gemäß des Selektivvertrags zur Versorgung im Fachgebiet Orthopädie nach § 73c SGB V
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Eszter Füzéki, Florian Giesche, Jan Rink, Laura Würzberger, and Winfried Banzer
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Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health - Abstract
Zusammenfassung Hintergrund und Zielsetzung Der Selektivvertrag zzur Versorgung im Fachgebiet Orthopädie in Baden-Württemberg (FAV Orthopädie) gemäß § 73c SGB V hat das Ziel, die Über‑, Unter- und Fehlversorgung bei muskuloskeletalen Erkrankungen zu mindern und durch eine leitliniengerechte Patientenversorgung die Qualität dieser zu verbessern. Ein Kernelement der FAV Orthopädie ist die Einführung einer Pauschale für eine motivationale und präventiven Beratung zur Lebensstiländerung und Stärkung des Selbstmanagements nach einem für das FAV Orthopädie entwickelten 4‑Stufen-Konzept. Ziel unserer Untersuchung war es, die Implementierbarkeit des FAV Orthopädie aus Sicht der teilnehmenden Ärztinnen und Ärzten und medizinischen Fachangestellten zu erfassen, die Implementierungstreue der Lebensstilberatung nach dem 4‑Stufen-Konzept, den selbsteingeschätzten Beratungserfolg sowie Barrieren der Lebensstilberatung zu dokumentieren. Methode Es wurde eine anonyme Onlinebefragung der beiden Zielgruppen durchgeführt. Die Implementierbarkeit wurde mithilfe des Hexagon-Tools erfasst. Die Teilnehmenden gaben zudem an, welche Beratungsinhalte sie nach dem 4‑Stufen-Konzept durchführen (Implementierungstreue) und welche Hindernisse hierbei auftraten (Barrieren). Der selbsteingeschätzte Beratungserfolg wurde für die Bereiche Bewegung, Ernährung, Rauchen und Stressmanagement dokumentiert. Die Daten wurden deskriptiv ausgewertet. Ergebnisse Ein Drittel der angeschriebenen Ärztinnen und Ärzten (n = 191) und 101 medizinische Fachangestellte haben die Fragen bzgl. der Umsetzung beantwortet. Die Mehrheit schätzte die Implementierbarkeit des FAV Orthopädie positiv ein. Es zeigte sich eine (sehr) hohe Implementierungstreue (Lebensstilberatung nach dem 4‑Stufen-Konzept; n = 53 Ärztinnen und Ärzte; n = 81 medizinische Fachangestellte). Während etwas mehr als ein Drittel der Ärztinnen und Ärzte keine Barrieren sah, gaben über 60 % weiterhin Barrieren zur routinemäßigen Beratung an. Der Beratungserfolg beider befragten Berufsgruppen wurde im Bereich Bewegung als relativ hoch, in den Bereichen Ernährung und Stressmanagement als mäßig und im Bereich Raucherentwöhnung als eher gering eingeschätzt. Diskussion Nach den vorliegenden Daten lässt sich der FAV Orthopädie in den Praxisalltag integrieren. Der FAV stellt Rahmenbedingungen her, die eine hohe Lebensstilberatungsprävalenz ermöglichen, auch wenn teilweise weiterhin von räumlichen und zeitlichen Barrieren sowie patientenbezogenen Hindernissen berichtet wird. Resümierend liefert unsere Studie erste Hinweise dafür, dass der FAV Orthopädie die biopsychosoziale und leitliniengerechte Versorgung im Bereich muskuloskeletalen Erkrankungen stärkt.
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- 2022
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3. Cortical Motor Planning and Biomechanical Stability During Unplanned Jump Landings in Men With Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction
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Daniel Niederer, Solveig Vieluf, Jan Wilke, Florian Giesche, Tobias Engeroff, and Winfried Banzer
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Knee Joint ,Anterior cruciate ligament ,Movement ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Context (language use) ,Electroencephalography ,Young Adult ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Knee ,Ground reaction force ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction ,business.industry ,Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries ,General Medicine ,Anticipation ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Sample size determination ,business ,Neurocognitive ,Center of pressure (fluid mechanics) - Abstract
Context Athletes with anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction (ACLR) exhibit increased cortical motor planning during simple sensorimotor tasks compared with healthy athletes serving as control groups. This may interfere with proper decision making during time-constrained movements, elevating the reinjury risk. Objective To compare cortical motor planning and biomechanical stability during jump landings between participants with ACLR and healthy individuals. Design Cross-sectional study. Setting Laboratory. Patients or Other Participants Ten men with ACLR (age = 28 ± 4 years, time after surgery = 63 ± 35 months) and 17 healthy men (age = 28 ± 4 years) completed 43 ± 4 preplanned (landing leg shown before takeoff) and 51 ± 5 unplanned (visual cue during flight) countermovement jumps with single-legged landings. Main Outcome Measure(s) Movement-related cortical potentials (MRCPs) and frontal θ frequency power before the jump were analyzed using electroencephalography. Movement-related cortical potentials were subdivided into 3 successive 0.5-second time periods (readiness potential [RP]-1, RP-2, and negative slope [NS]) relative to movement onset, with higher values indicating more motor planning. Theta power was calculated for the last 0.5 second before movement onset, with higher values demonstrating more focused attention. Biomechanical landing stability was measured via peak vertical ground reaction force, time to stabilization, and center of pressure. Results Both the ACLR and healthy groups evoked MRCPs at all 3 time periods. During the unplanned task analyzed using P values and Cohen d, the ACLR group exhibited slightly higher but not different MRCPs, achieving medium effect sizes (RP-1: P = .25, d = 0.44; RP-2: P = .20, d = 0.53; NS: P = .28, d = 0.47). The ACLR group also showed slightly higher θ power values that were not different during the preplanned (P = .18, d = 0.29) or unplanned (P = .42, d = 0.07) condition, achieving small effect sizes. The groups did not differ in their biomechanical outcomes (P values > .05). No condition × group interactions occurred (P values > .05). Conclusions Our jump-landing task evoked MRCPs. Although not different between groups, the observed effect sizes provided the first indication that men with ACLR might have consistently relied on more cortical motor planning associated with unplanned jump landings. Confirmatory studies with larger sample sizes are warranted.
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- 2023
4. Reliability and Usefulness of the Skillcourt as a Computerized Agility and Motor-Cognitive Testing Tool
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David Friebe, Thorben Hülsdünker, Florian Giesche, Winfried Banzer, Florian Pfab, Christian Haser, and Lutz Vogt
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Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine - Published
- 2023
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5. Effects of single bouts of different endurance exercises with different intensities on microRNA biomarkers with and without blood flow restriction: a three-arm, randomized crossover trial
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Thomas Schmitz-Rixen, Tobias Engeroff, Christian Troidl, Daniel Niederer, Winfried Banzer, Johanna Sieland, Lutz Vogt, and Kerstin Troidl
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Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Sports medicine ,Physiology ,miR-142-5p ,Blood Flow Restriction Therapy ,Young Adult ,Heart Rate ,Endurance training ,Physiology (medical) ,Internal medicine ,Heart rate ,Circulating miRNA ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,ddc:610 ,Treadmill ,Exercise ,miR-197-3p ,miR-342-3p ,Cross-Over Studies ,business.industry ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Skeletal muscle ,General Medicine ,miR-424-5p ,Crossover study ,Healthy Volunteers ,Blood flow restriction ,MicroRNAs ,Circulating MicroRNA ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Exercise Test ,Lactates ,Original Article ,Female ,business ,Anaerobic exercise ,Biomarkers - Abstract
Purpose Physical activity is associated with altered levels of circulating microRNAs (ci-miRNAs). Changes in miRNA expression have great potential to modulate biological pathways of skeletal muscle hypertrophy and metabolism. This study was designed to determine whether the profile of ci-miRNAs is altered after different approaches of endurance exercise. Methods Eighteen healthy volunteers (aged 24 ± 3 years) participated this three-arm, randomized-balanced crossover study. Each arm was a single bout of treadmill-based acute endurance exercise at (1) 100% of the individual anaerobic threshold (IANS), (2) at 80% of the IANS and (3) at 80% of the IANS with blood flow restriction (BFR). Load-associated outcomes (fatigue, feeling, heart rate, and exhaustion) as well as acute effects (circulating miRNA patterns and lactate) were determined. Results All training interventions increased the lactate concentration (LC) and heart rate (HR) (p p p = 0.037 and p = 0.003). The level of miR-142-5p and miR-197-3p were up-regulated in both interventions without BFR (p p = 0.038). In LI-BFR, the level of miR-342-3p and miR-424-5p was confirmed to be up-regulated (p p = 0.011, r = − 0.343/miR-199a-3p, p = 0.045, r = − 0.274/miR-125b-5p, p = 0.026, r = − 0.302). Two partial correlations (intervention partialized) showed a systematic impact of the type of exercise (LI-BFR vs. HI) (miR-99a-59: r = − 0.280/miR-199a-3p: r = − 0.293). Conclusion MiRNA expression patterns differ according to type of activity. We concluded that not only the intensity of the exercise (LC) is decisive for the release of circulating miRNAs—as essential is the type of training and the oxygen supply.
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- 2021
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6. Effects of a structured exercise therapy on cancer-related fatigue during and after paediatric stem cell transplantation: a randomized controlled trial
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Peter Bader, Winfried Banzer, Andreas Rosenhagen, Susanne Wallek, Klaus Siegler, Anna Senn-Malashonak, Michael Jung, and Patric Schubert
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medicine.medical_specialty ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Childhood cancer ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,stem cell transplantation ,law.invention ,rehabilitation ,Randomized controlled trial ,law ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,childhood cancer ,physical therapy ,Cancer-related fatigue ,Rehabilitation ,business.industry ,Paediatric oncology ,Exercise therapy ,cancer-related fatigue ,Transplantation ,paediatric oncology ,Medicine ,Stem cell ,medicine.symptom ,business - Published
- 2021
7. Effectiveness of exercise and physical activity interventions to improve long-term patient-relevant cognitive and non-cognitive outcomes in people living with mild cognitive impairment: a protocol of a systematic review and meta-analysis
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Mirjam, Dieckelmann, Ana Isabel, Gonzalez-Gonzalez, Winfried, Banzer, Andrea, Berghold, Klaus, Jeitler, Johannes, Pantel, Arthur, Schall, Valentina A, Tesky, and Andrea, Siebenhofer
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Meta-Analysis as Topic ,Quality of Life ,Humans ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Dementia ,Middle Aged ,Cognition Disorders ,Exercise ,Systematic Reviews as Topic - Abstract
Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is a clinical syndrome characterised by persistent cognitive deficits that do not yet fulfil the criteria of dementia. Delaying the onset of dementia using secondary preventive measures such as physical activity and exercise can be a safe way of reducing the risk of further cognitive decline and maintaining independence and improving quality of life. The aim is to systematically review the literature to assess the effectiveness of physical activity and exercise interventions to improve long-term patient-relevant cognitive and non-cognitive outcomes in people living with MCI, including meta-analyses if applicable.We will systematically search five electronic databases from 1995 onward to identify trials reporting on the effectiveness of physical activity and exercise interventions to improve long-term (12+ months) patient-relevant cognitive and non-cognitive outcomes in adults (50+ years) with MCI. Screening procedures, selection of eligible full-texts, data extraction and risk of bias assessment will be performed in dual-review mode. Additionally, the reporting quality of the exercise interventions will be assessed using the Consensus on Exercise Reporting Template. A quantitative synthesis will only be conducted if studies are homogeneous enough for effect sizes to be pooled. Where quantitative analysis is not applicable, data will be represented in a tabular form and synthesised narratively. People living with MCI will be involved in defining outcome measures most relevant to them in order to assess in how far randomised controlled trials report endpoints that matter to those concerned.Results will be disseminated to both scientific and lay audiences by creating a patient-friendly video abstract. This work will inform professionals in primary care about the effectiveness of physical activity and exercise interventions and support them to make evidence-based exercise recommendations for the secondary prevention of dementia in people living with MCI. No ethical approval required.CRD42021287166.
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- 2022
8. High-Protein, Low-Glycaemic Meal Replacement Improves Physical Health-Related Quality of Life in High-Risk Persons for Metabolic Syndrome—A Subanalysis of the Randomised-Controlled ACOORH Trial
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Kerstin, Kempf, Martin, Röhling, Winfried, Banzer, Klaus Michael, Braumann, Martin, Halle, Nina, Schaller, David, McCarthy, Hans Georg, Predel, Isabelle, Schenkenberger, Susanne, Tan, Hermann, Toplak, Stephan, Martin, Aloys, Berg, and On Behalf Of The Acoorh Study Group
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Metabolic Syndrome ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,dewey610 ,Medizin ,Overweight ,Article ,health-related quality of life ,protein-rich ,low-glycaemic meal replacement ,weight reduction ,multicenter study ,RCT ,Hypoglycemia ,ddc ,Weight Loss ,Quality of Life ,Humans ,Obesity ,Exercise ,Life Style ,Food Science - Abstract
While obesity impairs health-related quality of life (HRQOL), lifestyle interventions targeting weight reduction have been effective in improving HRQOL. Therefore, we hypothesised that a meal replacement-based lifestyle intervention, which has been shown to successfully reduce weight, would also improve HRQOL more effectively than a lifestyle intervention alone. In the international, multicenter, randomised-controlled ACOORH-trial (Almased-Concept-against- Overweight-and-Obesity-and-Related-Health-Risk), overweight or obese participants with elevated risk for metabolic syndrome (n = 463) were randomised into two groups. Both groups received telemonitoring devices and nutritional advice. The intervention group additionally used a protein-rich, low-glycaemic meal replacement for 6 months. HRQOL was estimated at baseline, after 3 and 12 months, using the SF-36 questionnaire, and all datasets providing HRQOL data (n = 263) were included in this predefined subanalysis. Stronger improvements in the physical component summary (PCS) were observed in the intervention compared to the control group, peaking after 3 months (estimated treatment difference 2.7 [1.2; 4.2]; p < 0.0001), but also in the long-term. Multiple regression analysis demonstrated that insulin levels and the achieved weight loss were associated with the mental component summary (MCS) after 12 months (p < 0.05). Thus, meal replacement-based lifestyle intervention is not only effective in weight reduction but, concomitantly, in enhancing HRQOL.
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- 2022
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9. Injury and training history are associated with glenohumeral internal rotation deficit in youth tennis athletes
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Kristin, Kalo, Lutz, Vogt, Johanna, Sieland, Winfried, Banzer, and Daniel, Niederer
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Male ,lcsh:Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,Adolescent ,Rotation ,Shoulder Joint ,education ,GIRD ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Athletes ,Tennis ,Humans ,Tennis player ,Training history ,Range of Motion, Articular ,lcsh:RC925-935 ,Shoulder injury ,Retrospective Studies ,Research Article - Abstract
A glenohumeral internal rotation deficit (GIRD) of the shoulder, is associated with an increased risk of shoulder injuries in tennis athletes. The aim of the present study was to reveal the impact of 1) age, sex, specific training data (i.e. training volume, years of tennis practice, years of competitive play) and 2) upper extremity injuries on GIRD in youth competitive tennis athletes. A cross-sectional retrospective study design was adopted. Youth tennis players (n = 27, 12.6 ± 1.80 yrs., 18 male) belonging to an elite tennis squad were included. After documenting the independent variables (anthropometric data, tennis specific data and history of injury), the players were tested for internal (IR) and external (ER) shoulder rotation range of motion (RoM, [°]). From these raw values, the GIRD parameters ER/IR ratio and side differences and TRoM side differences were calculated. Pearson’s correlation analyses were performed to find potential associations of the independent variables with the GIRD outcomes. A significant positive linear correlation between the years of tennis training and IR side asymmetry occurred (p
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- 2020
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10. Sub-maximal endurance exercise does not mediate alterations of somatosensory thresholds
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Ann-Christin, Kortenjann, Winfried, Banzer, and Johannes, Fleckenstein
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Adult ,Male ,Pain Threshold ,Preventive medicine ,Cross-Over Studies ,Adolescent ,lcsh:R ,lcsh:Medicine ,Article ,Endurance Training ,Humans ,Female ,Sensory processing ,lcsh:Q ,lcsh:Science - Abstract
Physical exercise has been shown to alter sensory functions, such as sensory detection or perceived pain. However, most contributing studies rely on the assessment of single thresholds, and a systematic testing of the sensory system is missing. This randomised, controlled cross-over study aims to determine the sensory phenotype of healthy young participants and to assess if sub-maximal endurance exercise can impact it. We investigated the effects of a single bout of sub-maximal running exercise (30 min at 80% heart rate reserve) compared to a resting control in 20 healthy participants. The sensory profile was assessed applying quantitative sensory testing (QST) according to the protocol of the German Research Network on Neuropathic Pain. QST comprises a broad spectrum of thermal and mechanical detection and pain thresholds. It was applied to the forehead of study participants prior and immediately after the intervention. Time between cross-over sessions was one week. Sub-maximal endurance exercise did not significantly alter thermal or mechanical sensory function (time × group analysis) in terms of detection and pain thresholds. The sensory phenotypes did not indicate any clinically meaningful deviation of sensory function. The alteration of sensory thresholds needs to be carefully interpreted, and only systematic testing allows an improved understanding of mechanism. In this context, sub-maximal endurance exercise is not followed by a change of thermal and mechanical sensory function at the forehead in healthy volunteers.
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- 2020
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11. Lower Extremity Open Skill Training Effects on Perception of Visual Stimuli, Cognitive Processing, and Performance
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David Friebe, Daniel Niederer, Lutz Vogt, Tobias Engeroff, Winfried Banzer, Jan Wilke, and Florian Giesche
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Male ,Visual perception ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Biophysics ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,050105 experimental psychology ,Task (project management) ,03 medical and health sciences ,Skills training ,Cognition ,0302 clinical medicine ,Perception ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Postural Balance ,media_common ,05 social sciences ,Mental Status and Dementia Tests ,Lower Extremity ,Visual Perception ,Female ,Psychology ,Psychomotor Performance ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cognitive psychology - Abstract
This study investigates if lower extremity open-skill training impacts perception and cognitive processing abilities or just influences task related motor abilities. Twenty-two participants (24.7 ± 2.4years; 11 males, 11 females) were randomly allocated either into the group that trained on a computerized device or to the control group. Prior to and following the 4-week study period, motor performance was assessed using drop jump, hexagon test, postural control and lower extremity choice reaction. Perception, cognitive processing and task inhibition were captured using validated neurocognitive tests. Repeated measurements analyses of co-variances (ANCOVAs) were performed. They revealed a time (before and after intervention) × group (training vs. control) effect on lower extremity choice reaction and hexagon (
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- 2020
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12. Injury Profile of Hip-Hop Dancers
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Daniel Niederer, Lutz Vogt, Olga Tjukov, Winfried Banzer, and Tobias Engeroff
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Adolescent ,Poison control ,Risk Assessment ,Young Adult ,Injury Severity Score ,Risk Factors ,Injury prevention ,medicine ,Humans ,Dancing ,Range of Motion, Articular ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Retrospective Studies ,Groin ,business.industry ,Retrospective cohort study ,General Medicine ,Trunk ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Lower Extremity ,Athletic Injuries ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Ankle ,Range of motion ,business - Abstract
This study assessed the injury incidence, mechanisms, and associated potential risk factors for hip-hop, popping, locking, house, and breaking dance styles. Data were collected from June to November 2015. The retrospective cohort study included 146 dancers (female: N = 67; age = 20 ± 4.2 years; males: N = 79; age = 22.9 ± 5.8 years) who completed a questionnaire that collected data concerning training hours, injuries, self-reported injury causes, treatment, and recovery time over the last 5 years. For the last 5 years, 52% (N = 76) of the dancers reported 159 injuries and, in the year prior to the survey, 31.5% (N = 46) reported a total of 75 injuries. Overall, 0.61 injuries (5 years) and 1.156 injuries (1 year) per 1,000 hours exposure time occurred. For breaking, 1.286 injuries (5 years) and 2.456 injuries (1 year) per 1,000 hours exposure time were calculated, while the other dance styles accumulatively reached 0.151 injuries (5 years) and 0.318 injuries (1 year) per 1,000 hours of exposure time. Breakers reported most injuries at the upper extremities, followed by the lower extremities, trunk, and head and neck region. Most injuries in hip-hop occurred at the lower extremities, mainly affecting the knees, followed by groin and ankle. Injuries experienced by popping and locking dancers only involved the lower extremities. In house, the lower extremities were affected most frequently, followed by the trunk. A total of 65.3% of the dancers experienced time loss, with a duration of 12.7 ± 21.3 weeks. Breakers experience significantly more injuries than dancers of the other styles. Injury risk among dancers of all the styles studied can be considered low compared to soccer players, swimmers, and long-distance runners.
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- 2020
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13. Prevalence of Biopsychosocial Factors of Pain in 865 Sports Students of the Dach (Germany, Austria, Switzerland) Region – A Cross-Sectional Survey
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Anke Bumann, Winfried Banzer, Johannes Fleckenstein
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lcsh:Sports ,lcsh:GV557-1198.995 ,pain questionnaire ,pain management ,quality of life ,lcsh:Sports medicine ,preventive medicine ,lcsh:RC1200-1245 ,human activities ,elite athlete - Abstract
When sports are part of a person’s profession or education, their careers are often handicapped by pain, a complex physical and mental state that may already occur at lower career stages. This study was designed to assess the occurrence of pain among sports students and the prevalence of relevant contributing psychosocial co-factors. Exploratory cross-sectional study surveying students at 89 sports faculties of universities in the DACH region using the German Sports Pain Questionnaire. It includes several validated surveys related to pain occurrence in different body regions, injuries, pain diagnoses and pain intensity, depression, anxiety, stress, self-compassion, analgesic and alcohol consumption, as well as sleep quality, health-related quality of life and impairments of quality of life by pain. A total of 865 sports students gave consent to participate in the study, and 664 participants (78%; 23.3 ± 2.84 years, 60% female, 40% male) completed the full survey. More than half of the students (53%; n = 403) showed current pain in 2-5 regions of the body, while subjective pain tolerance was enhanced. General injuries or accidents, medically and self-diagnosed pain diagnoses during the last eight weeks were reported by 30%. A current pain intensity ≥ 3 NRS was prevalent in 28% (n = 205), which correlated with increased pain-related biopsychosocial scores. Sports students had increased scores for depression, anxiety and stress, and self-compassion was reduced (compared to age-controlled national reference data, sports students head increased scores). The mean weekly training workload was 5-7 hours. Analgesics and alcohol consumption was increased, 61% reported insomnia. Across sports students, pain and biopsychosocial burden seem significantly increased when compared to other students and age-controlled cohorts. The data implies the need of giving greater importance to pain management at least from the time of sports studies in order to prevent pain and health risks in sports.
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- 2020
14. Die Anwendung der Traditionellen Chinesischen Medizin (TCM)/Akupunktur in der Therapie und Prävention von SARS-CoV-2-Infektionen
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Johannes Fleckenstein, Eszter Füzéki, and Winfried Banzer
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0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,Gynecology ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine.medical_specialty ,030104 developmental biology ,Complementary and alternative medicine ,business.industry ,010608 biotechnology ,medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,business ,01 natural sciences - Abstract
Gegenwartig kursieren zahlreiche Vorschlage zur potenziellen Wirksamkeit von Traditioneller Chinesischer Medizin (TCM)/Akupunktur in der Therapie von SARS-CoV-2-Infektionen und assoziierten Symptomen. Stand dieser Uberlegungen sind insbesondere molekularvirologische, aber auch klinische Untersuchungen aus der SARS-Epidemie 2002/2003. Ein Wirksamkeitsnachweis von chinesischen Arzneimitteln mit antiviralem Potenzial in Bezug auf SARS-CoV‑2 steht grostenteils aus. Klinische Daten stutzen sich nahezu ausschlieslich auf Studien vor Beginn der Coronapandemie. Gegenwartig finden sich nur international publizierte Fallberichte sowie in China berichtete Beobachtungsstudien. Vielversprechend ist eine grose Zahl registrierter prospektiver Studien, die gegenwartig durchgefuhrt werden. Die Evidenzlage fur die nichtpharmakologischen Therapiesaulen der TCM ist sehr schwach. Auf Basis der Datenlage ist eine Kombination westlicher und TCM-Masnahmen in der westlichen Welt nur nach Ausschopfung der konventionellen Masnahmen gerechtfertigt.
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- 2020
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15. Unanticipated jump-landing quality in patients with anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction: How long after the surgery and return to sport does the re-injury risk factor persist?
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Johannes Frank, Jan Wilke, Daniel Niederer, Philipp Niemeyer, Florian Giesche, Tobias Engeroff, Thomas Stein, Winfried Banzer, Maren Janko, and Lutz Vogt
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Time Factors ,Anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction ,Movement ,Anterior cruciate ligament ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Functional testing ,Biophysics ,Return to sport ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Humans ,Injury risk ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,In patient ,Ground reaction force ,Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction ,Reinjuries ,business.industry ,Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries ,Recovery of Function ,030229 sport sciences ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Return to Sport ,Surgery ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Jump ,Female ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Background Inadequate reactions to unforeseen external stimuli are regarded as a major cause for non-contact anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries. We aimed to delineate a potential deficit in the ability to perform unanticipated jump-landing manoeuvres, its sustainability and potential as a new outcome measure after ACL-reconstruction. Methods Physically active adults (n = 27, 13 females, 14 males, 29.7 standard deviation 3.1 years) with a history of unilateral ACL rupture and subsequent reconstruction (6 months to 7 years ago), cleared for return to sports, were included. All participants performed counter-movement jumps with unanticipated single leg landings. Visual information shown after jump take-off indicated the required landing leg. Jump time [s] and successfulness [yes/no], vertical peak ground reaction forces at landing [N], as well as time to stabilisation after landing [s] and path length of the centre of pressure (CoP, [mm]) were calculated. Limb symmetry ratios were determined and analysed for their association with the time since surgery. Findings Time since ACL reconstruction was logarithmically (basis 10) associated with side symmetry improvements in peak ground reaction force (R2 = 0.23, p Interpretation A deficit in unanticipated jump-landing ability seems to persist far beyond surgical restoration of mechanical stability and resumption of initial physical activities levels. The assessment of the ability to suddenly adapt movements to unanticipated visual stimuli may be a relevant complementary component within current functional testing canon in monitoring therapy success and return to sport testing.
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- 2020
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16. Preventive effects of a single bout of exercise on memory and attention following one night of sleep loss: results of a randomised controlled study
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Johannes Fleckenstein, Sina Gerten, and Winfried Banzer
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Sleep-loss is a severe problem in night-shift workers. It causes fatigue and a decrease in awareness that may be counter-acted by exercise. This randomised controlled study in 22 university students investigated the effects of exercise to prevent loss of cognitive and physical performance following sleep deprivation. We were comparing a single bout of a 20-minutes circuit training to control in an experimental setting of overnight sleep loss. Outcomes included memory, cognitive tasks, and physical parameters. The occurrence of false memories was considered being the main outcome.Exercise did not exert significant effects on false memories (p = 0.456). We could detect a trend to significance (p < 0.01) assessing cognitive dimensions, i.e. selective and sustained attention, and visual scanning speed. This revealed strong effects of exercise on attention (p = 0.091; Cohen’s d = 0.76; ∆14%), cognitive performance, performance speed, and perceived sleepiness (p = 0.008; d = 0.60; ∆2.4 cmVAS). This study failed to show effects of exercise on memory function. Still, medium to strong effects on attention and consciousness can be considered clinically relevant. The results of this study encourage further research to determine its practicability and meaningfulness among night-shift workers.Trial registration: German Clinical Trials Register, DRKS00010655, registered 21. June 2016.
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- 2022
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17. The Acute Effects of Single or Repeated Bouts of Vigorous-Intensity Exercise on Insulin and Glucose Metabolism during Postprandial Sedentary Behavior
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Tobias, Engeroff, Eszter, Füzeki, Lutz, Vogt, and Winfried, Banzer
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Blood Glucose ,Cross-Over Studies ,Humans ,Insulin ,Female ,Sedentary Behavior ,Postprandial Period ,Exercise - Abstract
Fitness and exercise may counteract the detrimental metabolic and mood adaptations during prolonged sitting. This study distinguishes the immediate effects of a single bout vs. work-load and intensity-matched repeated exercise breaks on subjective well-being, blood glucose, and insulin response (analyzed as area under the curve) during sedentary time; and assesses the influence of fitness and caloric intake on metabolic alterations during sedentariness. Eighteen women underwent cardiopulmonary exercise testing and three 4 h sitting interventions: two exercise interventions (70% VO
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- 2022
18. Effects of COVID-19 Lockdown on Physical Performance, Sleep Quality, and Health-Related Quality of Life in Professional Youth Soccer Players
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Jil, Keemss, Johanna, Sieland, Florian, Pfab, and Winfried, Banzer
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In March 2020, the COVID-19 outbreak led to the declaration of a pandemic. The accompanying restrictions on public life caused a change in the training routines of athletes worldwide. The present study aimed to investigate the effects of a 13-week supervised home training program on physical performance, sleep quality, and health-related quality of life in professional youth soccer players during the first COVID-19 lockdown in Germany.Eight professional soccer players (age range 16-19; height: 1.81 ± 0.07 m; body weight: 72.05 ± 6.96 kg) from a Bundesliga team in Germany participated in this study. During the lockdown, they trained 5-6 days per week with home-based training plans and were monitored via tracking apps and video training. To determine the effects of home training, measurements were taken before (March 2020) and after (June 2020) the home training period. Bioelectrical impedance analysis was used to determine body composition, and an isokinetic strength test and a treadmill step test, including lactate measurements, were used to measure physical performance. Two questionnaires were responded to in order to assess health-related quality of life [Short-Form 36 Health Survey (SF-36)] and sleep quality (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index).When comparing measurements before and after the home training period, we observed significant increases in the following variables: body weight (72.05 ± 6.96 kg vs. 73.50 ± 6.68 kg,The COVID-19 lockdown led to an increase in body composition parameters and showed an improvement in the MCS and scores on the general and mental health subscales of the SF-36. Physical performance and sleep quality could be maintained during the home training period. These observations may help trainers for future training planning during longer interruptions in soccer training.
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- 2022
19. Going Online?-Can Online Exercise Classes during COVID-19-Related Lockdowns Replace in-Person Offers?
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Eszter, Füzéki, Jan, Schröder, Rüdiger, Reer, David A, Groneberg, and Winfried, Banzer
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Cross-Sectional Studies ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Communicable Disease Control ,COVID-19 ,Humans ,Female ,Pandemics - Abstract
Germany experienced a 6-month second lockdown (November 2020-April 2021) during the COVID-19 pandemic, which included the closure of all physical activity (PA) facilities. The use of online exercise classes (OECs) was promoted by public health and exercise organizations. Using the present cross-sectional online survey, we assess the use of and opinion towards OECs in Germany during the second lockdown. We used contingency tables and the Chi
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- 2022
20. Deducing the Impact of Physical Activity, Sedentary Behavior, and Physical Performance on Cognitive Function in Healthy Older Adults
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Sina Gerten, Tobias Engeroff, Johannes Fleckenstein, Eszter Füzéki, Silke Matura, Ulrich Pilatus, Lutz Vogt, Johannes Pantel, and Winfried Banzer
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cognition ,cardiorespiratory fitness ,exercise ,Neurosciences. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry ,older adults ,dementia ,RC321-571 - Abstract
Objectives: Participating in physical activity and maintaining physical performance as well as reducing sedentary behavior are discussed to be beneficially associated with cognitive function in older adults. The purpose of this cross-sectional analysis was to differentiate the relevance of objectively measured physical activity, physical performance, and sedentary behavior on cognitive function in healthy older adults (n = 56, age = 76 ± 7 yrs, gender = 30 female).Methods: Accelerometer based physical activity and sedentary behavior were analyzed as minutes per week spent sedentary and physically active with light or moderate to vigorous intensity. Participants' physical performance was assessed via cardiopulmonary exercise testing and analyzed as maximal workload and heart rate, heart rate reserve and peak oxygen uptake. The assessment of cognitive function included working memory, attention, executive function, and verbal memory. Data was analyzed with Spearman and partial correlations. Trial registration: NCT02343029.Results: Light physical activity was moderately associated with executive function (r = −0.339, p = 0.015). Attention was significantly associated with maximal workload (r = −0.286, p = 0.042) and peak oxygen uptake (r = −0.337, p = 0.015). Working memory was associated with maximal workload (r = 0.329, p = 0.017).Conclusion: Whereas a broad range of cognitive function were beneficially linked to physical performance, light intensity activities in particular showed an impact on executive function. Our research underlines the need to separate the impact of physical performance and physical activity on cognitive function and highlights the relevance of light physical activity.
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- 2022
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21. A High‐Protein and Low‐Glycemic Formula Diet Improves Blood Pressure and Other Hemodynamic Parameters in High‐Risk Individuals
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Martin, Röhling, Kerstin, Kempf, Winfried, Banzer, Klaus Michael, Braumann, Dagmar, Führer-Sakel, Martin, Halle, David, McCarthy, Stephan, Martin, Jürgen, Scholze, Hermann, Toplak, Aloys, Berg, Hans-Georg, Predel, and Acoorh Study Group
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Nutrition and Dietetics ,dewey610 ,Medizin ,Blood Pressure ,Fasting ,Overweight ,Pulse Wave Analysis ,Article ,blood pressure ,insulin ,lifestyle intervention ,formula diet ,cardiac autonomic regulation ,pulse wave velocity ,heart rate ,Hypoglycemia ,ddc ,Diabetes Mellitus, Type 2 ,Hypertension ,Humans ,Obesity ,Food Science - Abstract
Low-caloric formula diets can improve hemodynamic parameters of patients with type 2 diabetes. We, therefore, hypothesized that persons with overweight or obesity can benefit from a high-protein, low-glycemic but moderate-caloric formula diet. This post-hoc analysis of the Almased Concept against Overweight and Obesity and Related Health Risk- (ACOORH) trial investigated the impact of a lifestyle intervention combined with a formula diet (INT, n = 308) compared to a control group with lifestyle intervention alone (CON, n = 155) on hemodynamic parameters (systolic and diastolic blood pressure (SBP, DBP), resting heart rate (HR), and pulse wave velocity (PWV)) in high-risk individuals with prehypertension or hypertension. INT replaced meals during the first 6 months (1 week: 3 meals/day; 2–4 weeks: 2 meals/day; 5–26 weeks: 1 meal/day). Study duration was 12 months. From the starting cohort, 304 (68.3%, INT: n = 216; CON: n = 101) participants had a complete dataset. Compared to CON, INT significantly reduced more SBP (−7.3 mmHg 95% CI [−9.2; −5.3] vs. −3.3 mmHg [−5.9; −0.8], p < 0.049) and DBP (−3.7 mmHg [−4.9; −2.5] vs. −1.4 mmHg [−3.1; 0.2], p < 0.028) after 12 months. Compared to CON, INT showed a pronounced reduction in resting HR and PWV after 6 months but both lost significance after 12 months. Changes in SBP, DBP, and PWV were significantly associated positively with changes in body weight and fat mass (all p < 0.05) and resting HR correlated positively with fasting insulin (p < 0.001) after 12 months. Combining a lifestyle intervention with a high-protein and low-glycemic formula diet improves hemodynamic parameters to a greater extent than lifestyle intervention alone in high-risk individuals with overweight and obesity.
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- 2022
22. Bewegung und Gesundheit
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Winfried Banzer and Eszter Füzéki
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Der Mensch ist auf Bewegung angelegt: Bewegung ist die naturliche Grundlage seiner korperlichen und psychischen Gesundheit. Ein Grosteil der Bevolkerung, Erwachsene wie Kinder, erfullt aber nicht die aus praventivmedizinischer Sicht geltenden Empfehlungen zur korperlichen Aktivitat. Dabei ist Bewegungsarmut ein bedeutsamer Risikofaktor fur chronische Erkrankungen, fruhzeitigen Verlust der Selbststandigkeit und Mortalitat. Regelmasige korperliche Aktivitat stellt auch bei schon bestehenden chronischen Erkrankungen eine Gesundheitsressource dar. Sie kann die (medikamentose) Therapie sinnvoll erganzen und die Leistungsfahigkeit starken. Neben den somatischen Effekten erhoht Bewegung das Wohlbefinden und die Lebensqualitat von sowohl Gesunden als auch chronisch Kranken, weist eine stressregulierende Wirkung auf und kann die Schlafqualitat verbessern. Daruber hinaus ist es nie zu spat anzufangen: die positiven Effekte der Bewegung entfalten sich auch, wenn sie erst im spaten Alter aufgenommen wird.
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- 2022
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23. Physical Activity and Well-Being during the Second COVID19-Related Lockdown in Germany in 2021
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Eszter Füzéki, Jan Schröder, Rüdiger Reer, David A. Groneberg, and Winfried Banzer
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Environmental sciences ,cycling ,walking ,Environmental effects of industries and plants ,leisure-time activity ,confinement ,mood ,coronavirus ,TJ807-830 ,GE1-350 ,TD194-195 ,Renewable energy sources - Abstract
In the second wave of the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany, lockdown measures were reinstalled and were in place between November 2020 and April 2021, including the closure of physical activity facilities. The aim of the current online survey was to assess the lockdown effects on physical activity and well-being in the general population. Pre-lockdown vs. lockdown differences were tested with the Χ2 test and the Student’s t-test for paired data. Predictor variables to explain compliance with physical activity recommendations were identified using a fixed-effects binary logistic regression analysis. Data of 993 respondents were analyzed. Transport-related and leisure-time physical activity decreased (p < 0.001, d = 0.25, and p < 0.001, d = 0.33, respectively). Compliance with physical activity recommendations decreased from 42.2% to 29.4% (chi2 (1, 1986) = 35.335, p < 0.001, V = 0.13). Well-being decreased significantly (t (990) = 23.405, p < 0.001) by 16.3 points (d = 0.74). Physical activity and well-being declined in German adults during the second COVID-19-related lockdown. Physical activity should be promoted also in light of the emerging evidence on its protective effects against COVID-19.
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- 2021
24. Das Dilemma der Akupunkturforschung mit Metaanalysen am Beispiel Rückenschmerz
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Winfried Banzer and Johannes Fleckenstein
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Complementary and alternative medicine ,business.industry ,Pain medicine ,Acupuncture ,Physical therapy ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Traditional Chinese medicine ,business - Published
- 2021
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25. Changes in miRNA expression in patients with peripheral arterial vascular disease during moderate- and vigorous-intensity physical activity
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Johanna Sieland, Daniel Niederer, Tobias Engeroff, Lutz Vogt, Christian Troidl, Thomas Schmitz-Rixen, Winfried Banzer, and Kerstin Troidl
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Physiology ,Physiology (medical) ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,General Medicine - Abstract
Background Walking is the preferred therapy for peripheral arterial disease in early stage. An effect of walking exercise is the increase of blood flow and fluid shear stress, leading, triggered by arteriogenesis, to the formation of collateral blood vessels. Circulating micro-RNA may act as an important information transmitter in this process. We investigated the acute effects of a single bout of 1) aerobic walking with moderate intensity; and 2) anaerobic walking with vigorous intensity on miRNA parameters related to vascular collateral formation. Methods Ten (10) patients with peripheral arterial disease with claudication (age 72 ± 7 years) participated in this two-armed, randomized-balanced cross-over study. The intervention arms were single bouts of supervised walking training at (1) vigorous intensity on a treadmill up to volitional exhaustion and (2) moderate intensity with individual selected speed for a duration of 20 min. One week of washout was maintained between the arms. During each intervention, heart rate was continuously monitored. Acute effects on circulating miRNAs and lactate concentration were determined using pre- and post-intervention measurement comparisons. Results Vigorous-intensity walking resulted in a higher heart rate (125 ± 21 bpm) than the moderate-intensity intervention (88 ± 9 bpm) (p p = 0.005; 3.3 ± 1.2 mmol/l), but not after moderate exercising (p > 0.05; 1.7 ± 0.6 mmol/l). The circulating levels of miR-142-5p and miR-424-5p were up-regulated after moderate-intensity (p p > 0.05). Conclusion Moderate-intensity walking seems to be more feasible than vigorous exercises to induce changes of blood flow and endurance training-related miRNAs in patients with peripheral arterial disease. Our data thus indicates that effect mechanisms might follow an optimal rather than a maximal dose response relation. Steady state walking without the necessity to reach exhaustion seems to be better suited as stimulus.
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- 2021
26. The impact of regular activity and exercise intensity on the acute effects of resistance exercise on cognitive function
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Winfried Banzer, Tobias Engeroff, and Daniel Niederer
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Strength training ,Trail Making Test ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Young Adult ,Cognition ,ddc:150 ,One-repetition maximum ,Memory span ,Medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Attention ,ddc:610 ,Exercise ,business.industry ,Cognitive flexibility ,Workload ,Resistance Training ,Intensity (physics) ,Physical therapy ,Exercise intensity ,Female ,business - Abstract
Beneficial acute effects of resistance exercise on cognitive functions may be modified by exercise intensity or by habitual physical activity. Twenty-six participants (9 female and 17 male; 25.5 ± 3.4 years) completed four resistance exercise interventions in a randomized order on separate days (≥48 h washout). The intensities were set at 60%, 75%, and 90% of the one repetition maximum (1RM). Three interventions had matched workloads (equal resistance*nrepetitions ). One intervention applied 75% of the 1RM and a 50% reduced workload (resistance*nrepetitions = 50%). Cognitive attention (Trail Making Test A-TMTA), task switching (Trail Making Test B-TMTB), and working memory (Digit Reading Spans Backward) were assessed before and immediately after exercise. Habitual activity was assessed as MET hours per week using the International Physical Activity Questionnaire. TMTB time to completion was significantly shorter after exercise with an intensity of 60% 1RM and 75% 1RM and 100% workload. Friedman test indicated a significant effect of exercise intensity in favor of 60% 1RM. TMTA performance was significantly shorter after exercise with an intensity of 60% 1RM, 90% 1RM, and 75% 1RM (50% workload). Habitual activity with vigorous intensity correlated positively with the baseline TMTB and Digit Span Forward performance but not with pre- to post-intervention changes. Task switching, based on working memory, mental flexibility, and inhibition, was beneficially influenced by acute exercise with moderate intensity whereas attention performance was increased after exercise with moderate and vigorous intensity. The effect of regular activity had no impact on acute exercise effects.
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- 2021
27. Investigation of the Sympathetic Regulation in Delayed Onset Muscle Soreness: Results of an RCT
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Johannes Fleckenstein, Elmo W. I. Neuberger, Philipp Bormuth, Fabio Comes, Angelika Schneider, Winfried Banzer, Lorenz Fischer, and Perikles Simon
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sports medicine ,sympathetic maintained pain ,Physiology ,pain therapy ,QP1-981 ,neurophysiology ,vegetative nervous system ,neuroinflammation - Abstract
Sports-related pain and injury is directly linked to tissue inflammation, thus involving the autonomic nervous system (ANS). In the present experimental study, we disable the sympathetic part of the ANS by applying a stellate ganglion block (SGB) in an experimental model of delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) of the biceps muscle. We included 45 healthy participants (female 11, male 34, age 24.16 ± 6.67 years [range 18–53], BMI 23.22 ± 2.09 kg/m2) who were equally randomized to receive either (i) an SGB prior to exercise-induced DOMS (preventive), (ii) sham intervention in addition to DOMS (control/sham), or (iii) SGB after the induction of DOMS (rehabilitative). The aim of the study was to determine whether and to what extent sympathetically maintained pain (SMP) is involved in DOMS processing. Focusing on the muscular area with the greatest eccentric load (biceps distal fifth), a significant time × group interaction on the pressure pain threshold was observed between preventive SGB and sham (p = 0.034). There was a significant effect on pain at motion (p = 0.048), with post hoc statistical difference at 48 h (preventive SGB Δ1.09 ± 0.82 cm VAS vs. sham Δ2.05 ± 1.51 cm VAS; p = 0.04). DOMS mediated an increase in venous cfDNA -as a potential molecular/inflammatory marker of DOMS- within the first 24 h after eccentric exercise (time effect p = 0.018), with a peak at 20 and 60 min. After 60 min, cfDNA levels were significantly decreased comparing preventive SGB to sham (unpaired t-test p = 0.008). At both times, 20 and 60 min, cfDNA significantly correlated with observed changes in PPT. The 20-min increase was more sensitive, as it tended toward significance at 48 h (r = 0.44; p = 0.1) and predicted the early decrease of PPT following preventive stellate blocks at 24 h (r = 0.53; p = 0.04). Our study reveals the broad impact of the ANS on DOMS and exercise-induced pain. For the first time, we have obtained insights into the sympathetic regulation of pain and inflammation following exercise overload. As this study is of a translational pilot character, further research is encouraged to confirm and specify our observations.
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- 2021
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28. Acute effects of an injury preventive warmup programme on unanticipated jump-landing-task performance in adult football players: A crossover trial
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Evans Y.K. Ashigbi, Winfried Banzer, David A. Groneberg, David Friebe, Daniel Niederer, and Florian Giesche
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Acute effects ,Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Warm-Up Exercise ,Football ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Task (project management) ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Injury prevention ,Task Performance and Analysis ,medicine ,Animals ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Takeoff ,Football players ,Cross-Over Studies ,business.industry ,Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries ,General Medicine ,Crossover study ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,business ,Center of pressure (fluid mechanics) - Abstract
In football, unpredictable events (e.g. unexpected landings) seem to play a crucial role in the mechanism of non-contact knee injuries. This study investigated the effects of a single bout of an injury preventive warmup protocol on biomechanical landing stability and decision-making quality during preplanned and unanticipated jump-landings. A crossover study on 18 male amateur football players was performed. The participants completed a standard (ergometer) and an injury-preventive warmup protocol (Prevent injury and Enhance Performance (PEP)) on two different test days. After each protocol, participants performed countermovement jumps with preplanned (landing side displayed before takeoff) and unanticipated (landing side shown after takeoff) single-leg landings on a force plate. Outcomes were landing stability (height and time of the maximum vertical ground reaction force (pGRF), center of pressure (CoP), the number of standing errors (ground contact with free leg)) and decision-making quality (landing error (wrong foot) count). Carry-over and crossover-tests were performed to find potential between-condition-differences. No carry-over effects occurred (p > .05). The PEP led to a reduced CoP trace length (-18.4 ± 32.2%, p = .021) and earlier occurrence of pGRF (-4.72 ± 6.78%, p = .017) in the preplanned condition. No significant between-treatment-differences occurred within the unanticipated landings and decision-making quality (p > .05). The primarily neuromuscular warmup protocol affects landing stability in the preplanned condition. However, it does not seem to better prepare football players for unpredictable events than a standard warmup.Trial registration: German Clinical Trials Register identifier: DRKS00016942.
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- 2021
29. Return to Sport Tests’ Prognostic Value for Reinjury Risk after Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction: A Systematic Review
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Daniel Niederer, Evans Y.K. Ashigbi, and Winfried Banzer
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Anterior cruciate ligament ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Risk Assessment ,Likelihood ratios in diagnostic testing ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Recurrence ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Muscle Strength ,Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction ,business.industry ,Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries ,Hazard ratio ,030229 sport sciences ,Odds ratio ,medicine.disease ,ACL injury ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,Return to Sport ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Relative risk ,Athletic Injuries ,Exercise Test ,Physical therapy ,business ,Hamstring - Abstract
Introduction Return to sports (RTS) clearance after anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction typically includes multiple assessments. The ability of these tests to assess the risk of a reinjury remains unknown. Purpose To assess and rate RTS self-reported function and functional tests on prognostic value for reinjury risk after ACL reconstruction and RTS. Study design Systematic review on level 2 studies. Methods PubMed, Web of Knowledge, Cochrane Library, and Google Scholar databases were searched for articles published before March 2018. Original articles in English or German that examined reinjury risks/rates after primary (index) ACL injury, ACL reconstruction, and RTS were included. All RTS functional tests used in the included studies were analyzed by retrieving an effect size with predictive value (odds ratio, relative risk (risk ratio), positive predictive value, positive likelihood ratio, or hazard rate). Results A total of 276 potential studies were found; eight studies (moderate to high quality) on 6140 patients were included in the final analysis. The reinjury incidence recorded in the included studies ranged from 1.5% to 37.5%. Four studies reported a combination of isokinetic quadriceps strength at different velocities and a number of hop tests as predictive with various effect sizes. One reported isokinetic hamstring to quadriceps ratio (hazard rate = 10.6) as predictive. Two studies reported functional questionnaires (knee injury and osteoarthritis outcome score and Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia-11; RR = 3.7-13) and one study showed that kinetic and kinematic measures during drop vertical jumps were predictive (odds ratio, 2.3-8.4) for reinjury and/or future revision surgery. Conclusions Based on level 2 evidence, passing a combination of functional tests with predetermined cutoff points used as RTS criteria is associated with reduced reinjury rates. A combination of isokinetic strength and hop tests is recommended during RTS testing.
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- 2019
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30. Exercise and microstructural changes in the motor cortex of older adults
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Elke Hattingen, Nicholas A. Bock, Ralf Deichmann, Ulrich Pilatus, Silke Matura, Winfried Banzer, Rainer Hellweg, Tobias Engeroff, Eszter Füzéki, Johannes Fleckenstein, Johannes Pantel, Christopher D. Rowley, Sina Gerten, and Lutz Vogt
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medicine.medical_specialty ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Region of interest ,Cortex (anatomy) ,medicine ,Humans ,Exercise ,Myelin Sheath ,Aged ,030304 developmental biology ,Aged, 80 and over ,0303 health sciences ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,business.industry ,General Neuroscience ,Motor Cortex ,Brain ,Magnetic resonance imaging ,Human brain ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Cerebral cortex ,Primary motor cortex ,Ventilatory threshold ,business ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Motor cortex - Abstract
Exercise has been shown to counteract age-related volume decreases in the human brain, and in this imaging study, we ask whether the same holds true for the microstructure of the cortex. Healthy older adults (n = 47, 65-90 years old) either exercised three times a week on a stationary bike or maintained their usual physical routine over a 12-week period. Quantitative longitudinal relaxation rate (R1 ) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) maps were made at baseline and after the 12-week intervention. R1 is commonly taken to reflect cortical myelin density. The change in R1 (ΔR1 ) was significantly increased in a region of interest (ROI) in the primary motor cortex containing motor outputs to the leg musculature in the exercise group relative to the control group (p = .04). The change in R1 in this ROI correlated with an increase in oxygen consumption at the first ventilatory threshold (VT1) (p = .04), a marker of improvement in submaximal aerobic performance. An exploratory analysis across the cortex suggested that the correlation was predominately confined to the leg representation in the motor cortex. This study suggests that microstructural declines in the cortex of older adults may be staved off by exercise.
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- 2019
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31. Ambulante Rehabilitationssportangebote für Krebspatienten: Eine Befragungsstudie zu Barrieren und Zugangswegen
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Winfried Banzer, Lutz Vogt, Katharina Graf, Elke Jäger, and Felix Middelmann
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Gynecology ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Oncology ,business.industry ,Rehabilitation exercise ,medicine ,General Medicine ,business - Abstract
Zusammenfassung Hintergrund Trotz einer steigenden Anzahl an Rehabilitationssportgruppen für Krebspatienten wird häufig von Schwierigkeiten beim Zugang zu entsprechenden wohnortnahen Angeboten berichtet. Ziel der Untersuchung war daher die Erhebung von Zugangswegen sowie wahrgenommenen Barrieren und Einflussgrößen für den Einstieg und die langfristige Teilnahme am Rehabilitationssport für Krebspatienten. Methode An der quantitativen und qualitativen Befragung beteiligten sich 189 Teilnehmer aus 21 ambulanten Rehabilitationssportgruppen (63±10 J.; 96 % weiblich; 82 % Brustkrebs; Rehasport-Teilnahme seit im Median 29 Monaten). Mittels standardisiertem Instrument (offene und geschlossene Fragen; validierte Skalen) wurden systematisch Faktoren erfasst, die Einstieg und Teilnahme am Rehabilitationssport potenziell beeinflussen können (z. B. Barrieren, Motive). Ergebnisse Vor dem Einstieg hatten 151 (80 %) der Befragten eine Empfehlung für die Teilnahme am Rehabilitationssport bekommen (40 % Stationäre Rehabilitation / Anschlussheilbehandlung; 24 % Familie / Freunde; 16 % Onkologe; 11 % Personal der onkologischen Einrichtung; 10 % Hausarzt / Gynäkologe). Hindernisse / Bedenken vor dem Einstieg umfassten insbesondere eine als zu starke wahrgenommene Müdigkeit / Erschöpfung (37 %), zu starke Schmerzen / Unwohlsein (15 %) und das Gefühl einer therapie- / erkrankungsbedingt zu geringen Fitness (14 %) sowie fehlende Kenntnisse über passende Angebote (19 %) und unzureichende Empfehlungen (13 %). Primäre Motive für den Einstieg und die Teilnahme am Rehabilitationssport liegen in einer Verbesserung von Gesundheit und Wohlbefinden (97 bzw. 93 %) sowie einer Reduktion von (Krankheits-)Beschwerden (96 %) und Rezidivrisiko (82 %). Fast alle Teilnehmer (n = 185; 98 %) wollen nach der Teilnahme am Rehasport weiterhin regelmäßig körperlich-sportlich aktiv bleiben (74 % im Sportverein, davon 36 % zusätzlich privat; 17 % ausschließlich privat). Gut 2 / 3 der Befragten (68 %) haben Interesse, an weiteren regulären Vereinssport-Angeboten teilzunehmen, 38 % kennen keine anderen Angebote bzw. Möglichkeiten im Verein. Diskussion Konkrete Empfehlungen und adäquate Aufklärung über Durchführbarkeit, Nutzen und Möglichkeiten von Rehabilitationssport scheinen für den Einstieg in eine entsprechende Krebssportgruppe relevant. Informationen zu Angeboten und Möglichkeiten, bestenfalls bereits während der Krebstherapie, könnten den Einstieg in den Rehasport und konsekutiv einen aktiven Lebensstil sowie die Nutzung des Potenzials von Bewegung unterstützen.
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- 2019
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32. Effectiveness of a home-based re-injury prevention program on motor control, return to sport and recurrence rates after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction: study protocol for a multicenter, single-blind, randomized controlled trial (PReP)
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Daniel, Niederer, Matthias, Keller, Andrea, Achtnich, Ralph, Akoto, Atesch, Ateschrang, Winfried, Banzer, Alexander, Barié, Raymond, Best, Andree, Ellermann, Andreas, Fischer, Daniel, Guenther, Mirco, Herbort, Jürgen, Höher, Maren, Janko, Tobias M, Jung, Matthias, Krause, Wolf, Petersen, Thomas, Stoffels, Amelie, Stöhr, Frederic, Welsch, and Thomas, Stein
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Adult ,Male ,Time Factors ,Adolescent ,Home Care Services, Hospital-Based ,Motor Activity ,RTS ,Young Adult ,Study Protocol ,610 Medical sciences Medicine ,Re-injury ,Motor control ,Recurrence ,Germany ,ddc:790 ,Secondary Prevention ,Humans ,Multicenter Studies as Topic ,Single-Blind Method ,ddc:610 ,Anterior Cruciate Ligament ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,lcsh:R5-920 ,Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction ,Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries ,Return to sports ,ACL ,Rehabilitation ,Post treatment ,Recovery of Function ,Functional outcome ,Return to Sport ,Treatment Outcome ,Female ,Therapy ,Return to play ,lcsh:Medicine (General) - Abstract
Background Although anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) tear-prevention programs may be effective in the (secondary) prevention of a subsequent ACL injury, little is known, yet, on their effectiveness and feasibility. This study assesses the effects and implementation capacity of a secondary preventive motor-control training (the Stop-X program) after ACL reconstruction. Methods and design A multicenter, single-blind, randomized controlled, prospective, superiority, two-arm design is adopted. Subsequent patients (18–35 years) with primary arthroscopic unilateral ACL reconstruction with autologous hamstring graft are enrolled. Postoperative guideline rehabilitation plus Classic follow-up treatment and guideline rehabilitation plus the Stop-X intervention will be compared. The onset of the Stop-X program as part of the postoperative follow-up treatment is individualized and function based. The participants must be released for the training components. The endpoint is the unrestricted return to sport (RTS) decision. Before (where applicable) reconstruction and after the clearance for the intervention (aimed at 4–8 months post surgery) until the unrestricted RTS decision (but at least until 12 months post surgery), all outcomes will be assessed once a month. Each participant is consequently measured at least five times to a maximum of 12 times. Twelve, 18 and 24 months after the surgery, follow-up-measurements and recurrence monitoring will follow. The primary outcome assessement (normalized knee-separation distance at the Drop Jump Screening Test (DJST)) is followed by the functional secondary outcomes assessements. The latter consist of quality assessments during simple (combined) balance side, balance front and single-leg hops for distance. All hop/jump tests are self-administered and filmed from the frontal view (3-m distance). All videos are transferred using safe big content transfer and subsequently (and blinded) expertly video-rated. Secondary outcomes are questionnaires on patient-reported knee function, kinesiophobia, RTS after ACL injury and training/therapy volume (frequency – intensity – type and time). All questionnaires are completed online using the participants’ pseudonym only. Group allocation is executed randomly. The training intervention (Stop-X arm) consists of self-administered home-based exercises. The exercises are step-wise graduated and follow wound healing and functional restoration criteria. The training frequency for both arms is scheduled to be three times per week, each time for a 30 min duration. The program follows current (secondary) prevention guidelines. Repeated measurements gain-score analyses using analyses of (co-)variance are performed for all outcomes. Trial registration German Clinical Trials Register, identification number DRKS00015313. Registered on 1 October 2018.
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- 2019
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33. Functional movement analysis in patients with chronic nonspecific low back pain: a reliability and validity study
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Johanna, Vogel, Jan, Wilke, Frieder, Krause, Lutz, Vogt, Daniel, Niederer, and Winfried, Banzer
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Adult ,Male ,lcsh:Diseases of the musculoskeletal system ,Movement patterns ,Movement ,Video Recording ,Pain intensity ,Disability Evaluation ,Activities of Daily Living ,Humans ,Low back pain ,ddc:610 ,Range of Motion, Articular ,Pain Measurement ,Disability ,Kinematic analysis ,Reproducibility of Results ,Unspecific pain ,Fear ,Middle Aged ,Idiopathic pain ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Chronic Pain ,lcsh:RC925-935 ,Research Article - Abstract
Background Individuals afflicted with nonspecific chronic low back pain (CLBP) exhibit altered fundamental movement patterns. However, there is a lack of validated analysis tools. The present study aimed to elucidate the measurement properties of a functional movement analysis (FMA) in patients with CLBP. Methods In this validation (cross-sectional) study, patients with CLPB completed the FMA. The FMA consists of 11 standardised motor tasks mimicking activities of daily living. Four investigators (two experts and two novices) evaluated each item using an ordinal scale (0–5 points, one live and three video ratings). Interrater reliability was computed for the total score (maximum 55 points) using intra class correlation and for the individual items using Cohen’s weighted Kappa and free-marginal Kappa. Validity was estimated by calculating Spearman’s Rho correlations to compare the results of the movement analysis and the participants’ self-reported disability, and fear of movement. Results Twenty-one participants (12 females, 9 males; 42.7 ± 14.3 years) were included. The reliability analysis for the sum score yielded ICC values between .92 and.94 (p .05). The study population showed comparably low pain levels, low scores of kinesiophobia and disability. Conclusion The functional movement analysis displays excellent reliability for both, live and video rating. Due to the low levels of disability and pain in the present sample, further research is necessary to conclusively judge validity.
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- 2019
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34. Intensity and workload related dose-response effects of acute resistance exercise on domain-specific cognitive function and affective response – A four-armed randomized controlled crossover trial
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Lutz Vogt, Daniel Niederer, Winfried Banzer, and Tobias Engeroff
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medicine.medical_specialty ,05 social sciences ,Repeated measures design ,Cognition ,Workload ,030229 sport sciences ,Audiology ,Crossover study ,050105 experimental psychology ,Arousal ,Intensity (physics) ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,One-repetition maximum ,medicine ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Psychology ,Applied Psychology ,Stroop effect - Abstract
Introduction Preliminary evidence indicates beneficial acute effects of resistance exercise on domain-specific cognitive function. Studies on dose response relationships and underlying mechanisms so far failed to deduce the impact of intensity and overall workload. Objective To analyze the impact of different intensities and workloads on effects of full body resistance training on cognitive attention, executive function performance, and affective response. Methods Twenty-six volunteers (9 (35%) female, age 25.9 ± 4.0 years) participated in three workload-matched (60%, 75% and 90% one repetition maximum intensity (1RM) resistance exercise interventions (RE)) and one workload reduced but intensity matched (75% 1RM, 50% overall workload) RE. Order was randomized, REs were on separate days with ≥48 h washout in between. Stroop Test performance (Attention: word and color condition; Interference control: word color interference), self-perceived levels of arousal and ability to concentrate were assessed before and after each RE. Results Workload-matched REs induced significant changes in attention and interference control. The workload reduced 75% 1RM RE induced changes in interference control, but no changes in attention performance. 75% 1RM exercise with full and 50% workload induced significant changes in arousal. Only 75% 1RM exercise with full workload significantly increased participants ability to concentrate. The repeated measures ANCOVA (Covariates: sex and fluid intelligence) indicated greater changes of interference control after 60% 1RM compared to 90% 1RM RE and greater changes of attention performance after 90% 1RM compared to 75% 1RM and 50% workload RE. Discussion Higher cognitive functions such as interference control seem to particularly benefit from moderate intensity RE whereas lower cognitive functions may be stimulated by higher intensity and higher workload RE. Self-perceived subjective factors did not mediate these dose response relationships. Future studies could analyze changes in cortisol levels, oxygenation, blood flow or electrophysiological signals to deduce triggers for increased stimulus-driven brain response and more controlled brain function.
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- 2019
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35. Wirksamkeit des Rezepts für Bewegung aus Patientensicht – die ärztliche Beratung und Handlungsabsichten/-konsequenzen nach erfolgter Rezeptverschreibung
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Lutz Vogt, Lars Gabrys, Rebekka Thoma, Winfried Banzer, Imke Hoppe, Eckhard Coester, Eszter Füzéki, and Gundi Friedrich
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Gynecology ,03 medical and health sciences ,medicine.medical_specialty ,0302 clinical medicine ,Political science ,medicine ,030229 sport sciences ,030212 general & internal medicine ,General Medicine - Abstract
Zusammenfassung Einleitung Präventive Bewegungsberatungen durch niedergelassene Ärzte sind aktuell in Deutschland nicht großflächig implementiert. Das „Rezept für Bewegung“ will das ärztliche Bewegungsberatungsgespräch für inaktive Patienten verbindlicher gestalten. Ziel der Studie war es, die Wahrnehmung der Beratungsqualität aus Patientensicht und die daraus resultierenden Handlungsabsichten und -konsequenzen systematisch zu erfassen. Methode Unter Verwendung eines standardisierten 17-Item-Instruments wurden 173 Patienten 3,9 ± 1,0 Monat(e) nach ärztlicher Beratung hinsichtlich Beratungszufriedenheit sowie Handlungsintention und -konsequenz anonym befragt. Die Dissemination erfolgte durch 12 kooperierende Arztpraxen in 8 Sportkreisen des Landessportbundes Hessen. Ergebnisse Gemäß Fragebogenrücklauf konnten Angaben von 51 Patienten (56,1 ± 13,3 Jahre; 35w.) in die Auswertung eingeschlossen werden. Knapp 2/3 der Befragten waren in ihrer Lebensspanne vor Beratung sehr geringfügig körperlich aktiv (≤ 60 min/Woche). Die Beratung zum „Rezept für Bewegung“ wurde in 63 % der Fälle mit gut bis sehr gut bewertet. Nach eigenen Angaben besuchten mehr als die Hälfte der Befragten im Anschluss ein Bewegungsangebot im Verein, 53 % trieben mehr Sport, 51 % gestalteten ihren Alltag körperlich aktiver. Befragte, die die Ausführlichkeit der Beratung als gut bewerteten, trieben nach eigenen Angaben in der Folge der Beratung signifikant häufiger Sport als vor der Beratung OR 3,16 (95 % KI 1,07 – 9,33). Fast die Hälfte der Befragten wünschten sich zur Erleichterung des Einstieges in ein Bewegungsangebot mehr Unterstützung von ihrer Krankenkasse. Diskussion Ärztliche Beratung im Sinne des „Rezepts für Bewegung“ kann als ergänzendes Instrument zur Sensibilisierung für das Thema Bewegung und Gesundheit unterstützen und zu entsprechender Steigerung der körperlichen Aktivität beitragen.
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- 2019
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36. Explaining Upper or Lower Extremity Crossover Effects of Visuomotor Choice Reaction Time Training
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Daniel Niederer, Sina Gerten, Florian Giesche, Lutz Vogt, Winfried Banzer, Jan Wilke, and Tobias Engeroff
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Adult ,Male ,Reduced risk ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Experimental and Cognitive Psychology ,Upper Extremity ,Executive Function ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Humans ,Medicine ,Attention ,Choice reaction time ,business.industry ,LOWER EXTREMITY INJURY ,Crossover effects ,030229 sport sciences ,Sensory Systems ,Lower Extremity ,Practice, Psychological ,Female ,business ,Motor learning ,Psychomotor Performance ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery - Abstract
Current evidence indicates a strong relation between improved visuomotor choice reaction time (VMRT) and a reduced risk of lower extremity injury, making both lower- and upper extremity VMRT training paradigms valuable to athletes. This investigation studied as yet unconfirmed crossover effects of upper extremity training on lower extremity performance; and we evaluated underlying relevant perceptual and cognitive adaptations. In this three-armed, randomized, controlled intervention, we used a computerized training device to compare participants receiving four weeks of upper ( n = 12) and lower ( n = 12) extremity VMRT training with a control group ( n = 13) of healthy participants. Collectively, our participants had a mean age of 24.6 years ( SD = 2.2), a mean height of 173 cm ( SD = 10), and a mean weight of 69.6 kg ( SD = 12.1); 57% ( n = 21) were female and 43% ( n = 16) were male. We assessed participants’ upper and lower extremity VMRT performance and domain-specific perceptual and cognitive abilities before and after intervention and analyzed differences between their before and after performances. Lower extremity training enhanced VMRT performances for both lower extremity and crossover upper extremity. Upper extremity training improved VMRT for upper extremity and increased cognitive choice reaction performance but yielded no crossover effects to lower extremity. We found no effects of VMRT training on other domain-specific cognitive performance markers (attention, executive function, memory, or working memory). VMRT training modulated only task-specific cognitive performance and induced crossover effects from lower extremity training to upper extremity performance but not vice versa.
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- 2019
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37. A review of hands-on based conservative treatments on pain in recreational and elite athletes
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Winfried Banzer and Johannes Fleckenstein
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Dry needling ,Massage ,Sports medicine ,business.industry ,Pain medicine ,medicine ,Acupuncture ,Physical therapy ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Elite athletes ,Generalizability theory ,business ,Recreation - Abstract
Summary Objectives Acute pain in sports tells us what not to do. Persisting pain limits the athletes’ activity and threatens his career. The reduction of pain is sought being highly beneficial for the sportsman, as it is shown that pain has only a weak connection to injury but a strong connection to the body image. Thus, pain therapy in sports medicine is a primary need of the athlete. Principle treatment goals are pain relief and return to play as quick as possible. Therapies in sports should primarily focus on conservative than on invasive approaches, with drugs being avoided as far as possible. There is a broad range of treatment approaches that could be applied in concert based on scientific and clinical decision making to reduce symptom severity, pain-associated dysfunction, and the risk of pain to be a tremendous cut in an elite athlete's career. Knowledge on this non-pharmacologic conservative pain medicine should not be restricted to health professionals, but the whole entourage of the athlete. This review highlights the current evidence with a focus on recreational and elite athletes. Based on their clinical evidence, it is hands-on techniques that can be recommended (Grade A: nerve blocks and injection techniques, ultrasound and laser therapy, manipulation mobilization, massage and traction; Grade B: acupuncture and dry needling). The occurrence of possible side-effects is, as far as reported, very unlikely. However, the methodological quality of the majority of retrieved studies limits the overall generalizability. Conclusion Conservative non-pharmacologic therapies reflect an adequate strategy to relief pain in elite athletes. Chronic states of pain reflect more complex scenarios requiring further comprehensive techniques. Future research should thus also address multimodal approaches combining several of the mentioned therapies.
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- 2019
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38. Health-promotion Counseling And Offers For Parents Of Children With Disabilities. A Public Health Pilot Project
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Florian Giesche, Jan Rink, Eszter Füzéki, and Winfried Banzer
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Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine - Published
- 2022
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39. Online Exercise Classes During The Second Covid-19 Lockdown In Germany: Users’ Perspective
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Eszter Füzéki, Jan Schröder, Rüdiger Reer, David A. Groneberg, and Winfried Banzer
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Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine - Published
- 2022
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40. Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction And Alterations In Biomechanical Landing-stability And Decision-making Quality During Unanticipated Jump-landings
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Evans Yayra Kwaku Ashigbi, Florian Giesche, Daniel Niederer, Lena Weßler, David Friebe, David A. Groneberg, and Winfried Banzer
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Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine - Published
- 2022
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41. Cortical Motor Planning and Biomechanical Stability During Unplanned Jump-Landings in Males With ACL-Reconstruction
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Florian, Giesche, Solveig, Vieluf, Jan, Wilke, Tobias, Engeroff, Daniel, Niederer, and Winfried, Banzer
- Abstract
Athletes with anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) reconstruction exhibit increased cortical motor planning during simple sensorimotor tasks compared to healthy controls. This may interfere with proper decision-making during time-constrained movements elevating the re-injury risk.To compare cortical motor planning and biomechanical stability during jump-landings between participants with ACL-reconstruction and healthy individuals.Cross-sectional exploratory study.Laboratory patients or other participants: Ten males with ACL-reconstruction (28±4 yrs., 63±35 months post-surgery) and 17 healthy males (28±4 yrs.) completed pre-planned (landing leg shown before take-off; n=43±4) and unplanned (visual cue during flight; n=51±5) countermovement-jumps with single-leg-landings.Movement-related cortical potentials (MRCP) and frontal theta frequency power before the jump were analyzed using electroencephalography. MRCP were subdivided into three successive 0.5 sec epochs (readiness potential 1 and 2; RP and negative slope; NS) relative to movement onset (higher values indicative of more motor planning). Theta power was calculated for the last 0.5 sec prior to movement onset (higher values indicative of more focused attention). Biomechanical landing stability was measured via vertical peak ground reaction force, time to stabilization, and center of pressure.Both conditions evoked MRCP at all epochs in both groups. During the unplanned condition, the ACL-reconstructed group exhibited slightly, but not significantly higher MRCP (RP-1:p=0.651, d=0.44, RP-2:p=0.451, d=0.48; NS:p=0.482, d=0.41). The ACL-reconstructed group also showed slightly higher theta power values during the pre-planned (p=0.175, d=0.5) and unplanned condition (p=0.422, d=0.3) reaching small to moderate effect sizes. In none of the biomechanical outcomes, both groups differed significantly (p0.05). No significant condition and group interactions occurred (p0.05).Our jump-landing task evoked MRCP. Although not significant between groups, the observed effect sizes provide first indication that males with ACL-reconstruction may persistently rely on more cortical motor planning associated with unplanned jump-landings. Confirmatory studies with larger sample sizes are warranted.clinicalTrials.gov (NCT03336060).
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- 2021
42. Acute effects of a neuromuscular warm-up on potential re-injury risk factors associated with unanticipated jump landings after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction: A crossover trial
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Evans Y.K. Ashigbi, Daniel Niederer, Winfried Banzer, David A. Groneberg, and Florian Giesche
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Acute effects ,Adult ,Anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction ,Knee Joint ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Anterior cruciate ligament ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Young Adult ,Risk Factors ,Injury prevention ,medicine ,Injury risk ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Ground reaction force ,Cross-Over Studies ,Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction ,Reinjuries ,business.industry ,Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injuries ,General Medicine ,Crossover study ,Biomechanical Phenomena ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Anesthesia ,Jump ,business - Abstract
OBJECTIVE To investigate acute effects of a single bout of football specific neuromuscular injury preventive warm-up on potential anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) re-injury risk factors during anticipated and unanticipated jump-landings. DESIGN Crossover. METHODS Fourteen participants (mean ± SD age, 23.4 ± 4.1 years) 6-24 months after ACL reconstruction performed the Prevent Injury and Enhance Performance (PEP) and bicycle ergometer warm-up in a randomised sequence. Washout phase was one week. Countermovement jumps with anticipated and unanticipated single-leg-landings were assessed. Decision-making quality was measured using landing error count. RESULTS No carry-over effects occurred (p > 0.05). The unanticipated task produced significantly higher peak ground reaction forces (Δ+4%, F(11) = 3.46, p
- Published
- 2021
43. Functional Capacity of Patients with Advanced Gastrointestinal and Breast Cancer Pre-treatment - a Cross-Sectional Comparison to Healthy Age-matched Women
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Winfried Banzer, Lutz Vogt, Katrin Stücher, Axel Dignass, and Claus Bolling
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Oncology ,Pre treatment ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Text mining ,Breast cancer ,business.industry ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,business ,medicine.disease - Abstract
Purpose: The aim of the study was to compare the functional status of patients with advanced gastrointestinal and breast cancer prior treatment to healthy age-matched volunteers. Methods: In this 3-arm cross-sectional study female patients with advanced cancer (UICC ≥ III) (gastrointestinal: n=17; 68.4±5.6years; BMI: 24±5.1kg/m2; breast: n=17; 64.1±7.8years; BMI: 23.6±3.7kg/m2) before first-line chemotherapy and 17 healthy age-matched women (68.6±5.8years; BMI 24.6±3.2kg/m2) were included. The functional status was assessed using the short physical performance battery (SPPB). A capacitive force platform was used for gait speed recordings during free level walking. Maximal isometric voluntary contraction force (MIVF) of the quadriceps muscle was assessed by a strain gauge force system. Body composition was obtained from bioelectrical-impedance-analysis. Physical activity was assessed via accelerometry. Results: Compared to the healthy controls and to patients with breast cancer, gastrointestinal cancer patients have lower values in the SPPB (10.4±1.3vs.8.9±2.0 vs.6.8±2.6; pConclusions: Already prior treatment patients with advanced gastrointestinal cancer have a reduced functional status compared to breast cancer patients and healthy controls. Gait speed, phase angle and MIVF are below cut-off values for a low prognosis of survival. This physical deconditioning prior treatment might influence the toxicity of the therapy. Thus, supportive interventions to improve the functional status and to support the treatment in patients with advanced gastrointestinal cancer seems to be of high concern.Trial Registration: Registered study at ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT02677129).
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- 2021
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44. Psychosocial Moderators and Mediators of Sensorimotor Exercise in Low Back Pain: A Randomized Multicenter Controlled Trial
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Pia-Maria Wippert, Daniel Niederer, David Drießlein, Heidrun Beck, Winfried Banzer, Christian Schneider, Marcus Schiltenwolf, and Frank Mayer
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Psychiatry ,multidisciplinary-therapy ,yellow flags ,MiSpEx-network ,RC435-571 ,motor-control-exercise ,low-back-pain - Abstract
The effects of exercise interventions on unspecific chronic low back pain (CLBP) have been investigated in many studies, but the results are inconclusive regarding exercise types, efficiency, and sustainability. This may be because the influence of psychosocial factors on exercise induced adaptation regarding CLBP is neglected. Therefore, this study assessed psychosocial characteristics, which moderate and mediate the effects of sensorimotor exercise on LBP. A single-blind 3-arm multicenter randomized controlled trial was conducted for 12-weeks. Three exercise groups, sensorimotor exercise (SMT), sensorimotor and behavioral training (SMT-BT), and regular routines (CG) were randomly assigned to 662 volunteers. Primary outcomes (pain intensity and disability) and psychosocial characteristics were assessed at baseline (M1) and follow-up (3/6/12/24 weeks, M2-M5). Multiple regression models were used to analyze whether psychosocial characteristics are moderators of the relationship between exercise and pain, meaning that psychosocial factors and exercise interact. Causal mediation analysis were conducted to analyze, whether psychosocial characteristics mediate the exercise effect on pain. A total of 453 participants with intermittent pain (mean age = 39.5 ± 12.2 years, f = 62%) completed the training. It was shown, that depressive symptomatology (at M4, M5), vital exhaustion (at M4), and perceived social support (at M5) are significant moderators of the relationship between exercise and the reduction of pain intensity. Further depressive mood (at M4), social-satisfaction (at M4), and anxiety (at M5 SMT) significantly moderate the exercise effect on pain disability. The amount of moderation was of clinical relevance. In contrast, there were no psychosocial variables which mediated exercise effects on pain. In conclusion it was shown, that psychosocial variables can be moderators in the relationship between sensorimotor exercise induced adaptation on CLBP which may explain conflicting results in the past regarding the merit of exercise interventions in CLBP. Results suggest further an early identification of psychosocial risk factors by diagnostic tools, which may essential support the planning of personalized exercise therapy.Level of Evidence: Level I.Clinical Trial Registration: DRKS00004977, LOE: I, MiSpEx: grant-number: 080102A/11-14. https://www.drks.de/drks_web/navigate.do?navigationId=trial.HTML&TRIAL_ID=DRKS00004977.
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- 2021
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45. High-protein, low-glycaemic meal replacement decreases fasting insulin and inflammation markers — a 12-month subanalysis of the ACOORH trial
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Kerstin Kempf, Martin Röhling, Winfried Banzer, Klaus Michael Braumann, Martin Halle, David McCarthy, Hans Georg Predel, Isabelle Schenkenberger, Susanne Tan, Hermann Toplak, Aloys Berg, Stephan Martin, on behalf of ACOORH Study Group, and ACOORH Study Group
- Subjects
Male ,0301 basic medicine ,obesity ,Meal replacement ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Medizin ,Overweight ,0302 clinical medicine ,Weight loss ,Insulin ,TX341-641 ,Meals ,fasting insulin ,Meal ,Nutrition and Dietetics ,Fasting ,Middle Aged ,multicentre study ,Intention to Treat Analysis ,Female ,Dietary Proteins ,medicine.symptom ,RCT ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Patient Dropouts ,protein-rich ,030209 endocrinology & metabolism ,Article ,Young Adult ,03 medical and health sciences ,Diabetes mellitus ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,overweight ,ddc:610 ,dewey570 ,Aged ,Inflammation ,Nutrition. Foods and food supply ,business.industry ,Body Weight ,lifestyle intervention ,medicine.disease ,Obesity ,030104 developmental biology ,Glycemic Index ,low-carbohydrate ,Chronic Disease ,low-glycaemic meal replacement ,weight reduction ,Metabolic syndrome ,business ,Biomarkers ,Food Science - Abstract
Lifestyle interventions, including meal replacement, are effective in the prevention and treatment of type-2-diabetes and obesity. Since insulin is the key weight regulator, we hypothesised that the addition of meal replacement to a lifestyle intervention reduces insulin levels more effectively than lifestyle intervention alone. In the international multicentre randomised controlled ACOORH (Almased Concept against Overweight and Obesity and Related Health Risk) trial, overweight or obese persons who meet the criteria for metabolic syndrome (n = 463) were randomised into two groups. Both groups received nutritional advice focusing on carbohydrate restriction and the use of telemonitoring devices. The intervention group substituted all three main meals per day in week 1, two meals per day in weeks 2–4, and one meal per day in weeks 5–26 with a protein-rich, low-glycaemic meal replacement. Data were collected at baseline and after 1, 3, 6 and 12 months. All datasets providing insulin data (n = 446) were included in this predefined subanalysis. Significantly higher reductions in insulin (−3.3 ± 8.7 µU/mL vs. −1.6 ± 9.8 µU/mL), weight (−6.1 ± 5.2 kg vs. −3.2 ± 4.6 kg), and inflammation markers were observed in the intervention group. Insulin reduction correlated with weight reduction and the highest amount of weight loss (−7.6 ± 4.9 kg) was observed in those participants with an insulin decrease >, 2 µU/mL. These results underline the potential for meal replacement-based lifestyle interventions in diabetes prevention, and measurement of insulin levels may serve as an indicator for adherence to carbohydrate restriction.
- Published
- 2021
46. Medical exercise and physiotherapy modes and frequency as predictors for a recurrence of chronic non-specific low back pain
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Lutz Vogt, Winfried Banzer, Frieder Krause, and Daniel Niederer
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Adult ,Male ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation ,Recurrence risk ,Cohort Studies ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,Non specific ,Risk Factors ,medicine ,Humans ,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine ,Physical Therapy Modalities ,business.industry ,Rehabilitation ,Mean age ,030229 sport sciences ,Middle Aged ,Manipulation, Osteopathic ,Predictive value ,Low back pain ,Exercise Therapy ,Relative risk ,Physical therapy ,Female ,Active treatment ,medicine.symptom ,Chronic Pain ,business ,Low Back Pain ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Cohort study - Abstract
BACKGROUND: A considerable part of patients with non-specific low back pain (LBP) suffer from a recurrence of symptoms after therapy cessation. OBJECTIVE: The aim of this cohort study was to evaluate the predictive value of active and passive treatments and treatment modalities on a recurrence of low back pain after cessation of medically prescribed therapy. METHODS: Patients with non-specific LBP from a health- and therapy-center were included. Treatments were monitored and categorized as active or passive. During one year after therapy cessation, patients were monitored to retrieve information about recurrence of symptoms. Patients were dichotomized (recurrence versus no recurrence). An ROC-Analysis was used to determine optimal cut-offs for relevant treatment characteristics’ (passive versus active; frequency) impact on recurrence risk. The relative risk for a recurrence was calculated based on Chi2-test. RESULTS: Data from 96 participants (56 females, 40 males, mean age 49 years, standard deviation 11 years) were analysed. A total of 34 participants had recurring LBP. The frequency of active treatment differed significantly between groups with or without recurrence (p< 0.05). A therapy frequency of 1.45 active treatments/week was a sensitive cut-off (sensitivity: 0.73) to discriminate the recurrence groups. Participants with an active therapy frequency of less than 1.45 treatments per week showed an 82% increased relative recurrence risk (RR: 1.824 (95%-CI: 1.077–3.087)). CONCLUSIONS: The results empathize the importance of active treatments (i.e. exercise) in the therapy and (secondary) prevention of non-specific LBP. Less than 1.45 active treatment sessions/week increases the 1-year-risk of a recurrence by 82%. Performing at least two treatments sessions per week is therefore recommended.
- Published
- 2021
47. Bewegung und Sport im Alter
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Martin Fischer, Winfried Banzer, and David A. Groneberg
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Complementary and alternative medicine ,business.industry ,Pain medicine ,Physical therapy ,Acupuncture ,Medicine ,Neurology (clinical) ,Traditional Chinese medicine ,business - Published
- 2021
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48. Effects of a Single Bout of Exercise on Memory and Attention Following One Night of Sleep Loss: Results of a Randomised Controlled Pilot Study
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Sina Gerten, Johannes Fleckenstein, and Winfried Banzer
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medicine.medical_specialty ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,business.industry ,medicine ,business ,Sleep loss - Abstract
BackgroundSleep-loss is a severe problem in night-shift workers. It causes fatigue and a decrease in awareness that may be counter-acted by exercise. This randomised controlled study in 22 university students investigated the effects of exercise on cognitive and physical performance following sleep deprivation. MethodsWe were comparing a single bout of a 20-minutes circuit training to control in an experimental setting of overnight sleep loss. Outcomes included memory, cognitive tasks, and physical parameters. The occurrence of false memories was considered being the main outcome.ResultsExercise did not exert significant effects on false memories (p = 0.456). We could detect a trend to significanxe (p < 0.01) assessing cognitive dimensions, i.e. selective and sustained attention, and visual scanning speed. This revealed strong effects of exercise on attention (p = 0.091; Cohen’s d = 0.76; ∆14%), cognitive performance, performance speed, and perceived sleepiness (p = 0.008; d = 0.60; ∆2.4 cmVAS). ConclusionsThis study failed to show effects of exercise on memory function. Still, medium to strong effects on attention and consciousness can be considered clinically relevant. The results of this study encourage further research to determine its practicability and meaningfulness among night-shift workers.Trial registrationGerman Clinical Trials Register, DRKS00010655, registered 21. June 2016.
- Published
- 2021
49. Psychosocial Moderators and Mediators of Sensorimotor Exercise in Low Back Pain: A Randomized Multicenter Controlled Trial
- Author
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Pia-Maria, Wippert, Daniel, Niederer, David, Drießlein, Heidrun, Beck, Winfried, Banzer, Christian, Schneider, Marcus, Schiltenwolf, and Frank, Mayer
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Psychiatry ,multidisciplinary-therapy ,yellow flags ,MiSpEx-network ,motor-control-exercise ,low-back-pain ,Clinical Trial - Abstract
The effects of exercise interventions on unspecific chronic low back pain (CLBP) have been investigated in many studies, but the results are inconclusive regarding exercise types, efficiency, and sustainability. This may be because the influence of psychosocial factors on exercise induced adaptation regarding CLBP is neglected. Therefore, this study assessed psychosocial characteristics, which moderate and mediate the effects of sensorimotor exercise on LBP. A single-blind 3-arm multicenter randomized controlled trial was conducted for 12-weeks. Three exercise groups, sensorimotor exercise (SMT), sensorimotor and behavioral training (SMT-BT), and regular routines (CG) were randomly assigned to 662 volunteers. Primary outcomes (pain intensity and disability) and psychosocial characteristics were assessed at baseline (M1) and follow-up (3/6/12/24 weeks, M2-M5). Multiple regression models were used to analyze whether psychosocial characteristics are moderators of the relationship between exercise and pain, meaning that psychosocial factors and exercise interact. Causal mediation analysis were conducted to analyze, whether psychosocial characteristics mediate the exercise effect on pain. A total of 453 participants with intermittent pain (mean age = 39.5 ± 12.2 years, f = 62%) completed the training. It was shown, that depressive symptomatology (at M4, M5), vital exhaustion (at M4), and perceived social support (at M5) are significant moderators of the relationship between exercise and the reduction of pain intensity. Further depressive mood (at M4), social-satisfaction (at M4), and anxiety (at M5 SMT) significantly moderate the exercise effect on pain disability. The amount of moderation was of clinical relevance. In contrast, there were no psychosocial variables which mediated exercise effects on pain. In conclusion it was shown, that psychosocial variables can be moderators in the relationship between sensorimotor exercise induced adaptation on CLBP which may explain conflicting results in the past regarding the merit of exercise interventions in CLBP. Results suggest further an early identification of psychosocial risk factors by diagnostic tools, which may essential support the planning of personalized exercise therapy. Level of Evidence: Level I. Clinical Trial Registration: DRKS00004977, LOE: I, MiSpEx: grant-number: 080102A/11-14. https://www.drks.de/drks_web/navigate.do?navigationId=trial.HTML&TRIAL_ID=DRKS00004977.
- Published
- 2020
50. Perceptual-cognitive function and unplanned athletic movement task performance: a systematic review
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Jan Wilke, David A. Groneberg, Winfried Banzer, and Florian Giesche
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,biology ,Movement (music) ,Athletes ,media_common.quotation_subject ,sport_sciences_therapy ,Cognition ,biology.organism_classification ,Checklist ,Task (project management) ,Physical medicine and rehabilitation ,Perception ,ddc:790 ,medicine ,ddc:610 ,Function (engineering) ,Psychology ,Association (psychology) ,media_common - Abstract
The performance of choice-reaction tasks during athletic movement has been demonstrated to evoke unfavorable biomechanics in the lower limb. However, the mechanism of this observation is unknown. We conducted a systematic review examining the association between (1) the biomechanical and functional safety of unplanned sports-related movements (e.g., jumps/runs with a spontaneously indicated landing leg/cutting direction) and (2) markers of perceptual-cognitive function (PCF). A literature search in three databases (PubMed, ScienceDirect and Google Scholar) identified five relevant articles. The study quality, rated by means of a modified Downs and Black checklist, was moderate to high (average: 13/16 points). Four of five papers, in at least one parameter, found either an association of PCF with task safety or significantly reduced task safety in low vs. high PCF performers. However, as (a) the outcomes, populations and statistical methods of the included trials were highly heterogeneous and (b) only two out of five studies had an adequate control condition (pre-planned movement task), the evidence was classified as conflicting. In summary, PCF may represent a factor affecting injury risk and performance during unplanned sports-related movements, but future research strengthening the evidence for this association is warranted.
- Published
- 2020
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