Search

Your search keyword '"Berryman CE"' showing total 47 results

Search Constraints

Start Over You searched for: Author "Berryman CE" Remove constraint Author: "Berryman CE"
47 results on '"Berryman CE"'

Search Results

1. Appetite Suppression and Altered Food Preferences Coincide with Changes in Appetite-Mediating Hormones During Energy Deficit at High Altitude, But Are Not Affected by Protein Intake

3. Dietary Intake and Diet Quality of Female and Male NCAA Division I Cross Country Runners from a Single University.

4. Associations between Essential Amino Acid Intake and Functional Health Outcomes in Older Adults: Analysis of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 2001-2018.

5. Effects of testosterone enanthate on aggression, risk-taking, competition, mood, and other cognitive domains during 28 days of severe energy deprivation.

6. Early time-restricted eating improves markers of cardiometabolic health but has no impact on intestinal nutrient absorption in healthy adults.

7. Replacement of dietary carbohydrate with protein increases fat mass and reduces hepatic triglyceride synthesis and content in female obese Zucker rats.

8. SIRT1 induction in the skeletal muscle of male mice partially attenuates changes to whole-body metabolism in response to androgen deprivation.

9. Metabolic Adaptations and Substrate Oxidation are Unaffected by Exogenous Testosterone Administration during Energy Deficit in Men.

10. Amino Acid Intake and Conformance With the Dietary Reference Intakes in the United States: Analysis of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 2001-2018.

11. Effect of exogenous testosterone in the context of energy deficit on risky choice: Behavioural and neural evidence from males.

12. Metabolomics of testosterone enanthate administration during severe-energy deficit.

13. A Prolonged Bout of Running Increases Hepcidin and Decreases Dietary Iron Absorption in Trained Female and Male Runners.

14. Testosterone status following short-term, severe energy deficit is associated with fat-free mass loss in U.S. Marines.

15. Effects of Testosterone on Mixed-Muscle Protein Synthesis and Proteome Dynamics During Energy Deficit.

16. Stress and the gut-brain axis: Cognitive performance, mood state, and biomarkers of blood-brain barrier and intestinal permeability following severe physical and psychological stress.

17. Effects of testosterone administration on fMRI responses to executive function, aggressive behavior, and emotion processing tasks during severe exercise- and diet-induced energy deficit.

18. Urinary Metabolites as Predictors of Acute Mountain Sickness Severity.

19. Energy Restriction Suppresses Muscle Protein Synthesis, and High Protein Diets Extend Protein Half-Lives Across the Muscle Proteome in Obese Female Zucker Rats.

20. Greater protein intake at breakfast or as snacks and less at dinner is associated with cardiometabolic health in adults.

21. Sensitivity and reliability of zinc transporter and metallothionein gene expression in peripheral blood mononuclear cells as indicators of zinc status: responses to ex vivo zinc exposure and habitual zinc intake in humans.

22. Testosterone supplementation upregulates androgen receptor expression and translational capacity during severe energy deficit.

23. High-Altitude Acclimatization Suppresses Hepcidin Expression During Severe Energy Deficit.

24. Protein intake is more stable than carbohydrate or fat intake across various US demographic groups and international populations.

25. Testosterone Administration During Energy Deficit Suppresses Hepcidin and Increases Iron Availability for Erythropoiesis.

26. Effects of Testosterone Supplementation on Ghrelin and Appetite During and After Severe Energy Deficit in Healthy Men.

27. Effects of carbohydrate supplementation on aerobic exercise performance during acute high altitude exposure and after 22 days of acclimatization and energy deficit.

28. Effects of testosterone supplementation on body composition and lower-body muscle function during severe exercise- and diet-induced energy deficit: A proof-of-concept, single centre, randomised, double-blind, controlled trial.

29. Variability in human plasma volume responses during high-altitude sojourn.

30. PI3K-AKT-FOXO1 pathway targeted by skeletal muscle microRNA to suppress proteolytic gene expression in response to carbohydrate intake during aerobic exercise.

31. Associations between the gut microbiota and host responses to high altitude.

32. Protein intake trends and conformity with the Dietary Reference Intakes in the United States: analysis of the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, 2001-2014.

33. Altitude Acclimatization Alleviates the Hypoxia-Induced Suppression of Exogenous Glucose Oxidation During Steady-State Aerobic Exercise.

34. Muscle Fn14 gene expression is associated with fat-free mass retention during energy deficit at high altitude.

35. Severe energy deficit at high altitude inhibits skeletal muscle mTORC1-mediated anabolic signaling without increased ubiquitin proteasome activity.

36. Appetite Suppression and Altered Food Preferences Coincide with Changes in Appetite-Mediating Hormones During Energy Deficit at High Altitude, But Are Not Affected by Protein Intake.

37. Severe negative energy balance during 21 d at high altitude decreases fat-free mass regardless of dietary protein intake: a randomized controlled trial.

38. Effects of Dark Chocolate and Almonds on Cardiovascular Risk Factors in Overweight and Obese Individuals: A Randomized Controlled-Feeding Trial.

39. Inclusion of Almonds in a Cholesterol-Lowering Diet Improves Plasma HDL Subspecies and Cholesterol Efflux to Serum in Normal-Weight Individuals with Elevated LDL Cholesterol.

40. Physiological and psychological effects of testosterone during severe energy deficit and recovery: A study protocol for a randomized, placebo-controlled trial for Optimizing Performance for Soldiers (OPS).

41. Muscle Protein Turnover and the Molecular Regulation of Muscle Mass during Hypoxia.

42. Supplementing an energy adequate, higher protein diet with protein does not enhance fat-free mass restoration after short-term severe negative energy balance.

43. Diets higher in animal and plant protein are associated with lower adiposity and do not impair kidney function in US adults.

44. Effects of daily almond consumption on cardiometabolic risk and abdominal adiposity in healthy adults with elevated LDL-cholesterol: a randomized controlled trial.

45. Acute consumption of walnuts and walnut components differentially affect postprandial lipemia, endothelial function, oxidative stress, and cholesterol efflux in humans with mild hypercholesterolemia.

46. Effects of almond consumption on the reduction of LDL-cholesterol: a discussion of potential mechanisms and future research directions.

47. Soy protein reduces serum cholesterol by both intrinsic and food displacement mechanisms.

Catalog

Books, media, physical & digital resources