Physical Education
Mehdi Zarei; Rahim Golmohammadi; Elham Iziy; Seyed Mehdi Beheshti Nasr
Volume 28, Issue 2 , May and June 2021, , Pages 165-172
Abstract
Introduction: There has been no report on the effect of epilepsy on liver enzymes and lipoproteins and its changes following exercisetraining in epileptic rats with Pentylenetetrazole. Materials and Methods: In this experimental study, 70 male rats were placed in 7 groups. An intact group, three groups ...
Read More
Introduction: There has been no report on the effect of epilepsy on liver enzymes and lipoproteins and its changes following exercisetraining in epileptic rats with Pentylenetetrazole. Materials and Methods: In this experimental study, 70 male rats were placed in 7 groups. An intact group, three groups of Kindle and three groups of non-Kindle who received PTZ or normal saline injections every 48 hours until the animals were kindled. 24 hours after Kindling, blood samples were collected in intact group and two groups of Kindle and non-Kindle. One Kindle group and one non-Kindle group from the remaining four groups performed aerobic exercise for six weeks, and the other two groups were inactive for six weeks. Blood were collected 24 hours after the 6-week period, and were compared with control groups. Results: After 4 weeks of Kindling period, total cholesterol, triglycerides, low-density lipoprotein, liver enzymes (P <0.001) and antigenic coefficient (P <0.01) increased significantly in the epileptic group. After six weeks of aerobic exercise in Kindle animals; Triglycerides (P <0.001), liver enzymes (P <0.01) and antigenic coefficients significantly reduced, and high-density lipoprotein significantly increased (P <0.01). Conclusion: The results showed that aerobic exercise in epileptic rats with Pentylenetetrazole improved lipid profile impairement and increased liver enzymes caused by epilepsy.
Mohammad Reza Hamedinia; Teyyebh Amiri Parsa; Marziyeh Saadat Azarnive; Seyyed Ali Reza Hosseini Kakhk
Volume 18, Issue 3 , September and October 2011, , Pages 188-197
Abstract
Background and Purpose: Obesity is associated with various metabolic and inflammatory impairments، the effects of which have not been sufficiently studied. Therefore، the purpose of this study was to examine the influence of an 8-week strength training and aerobic training program and a 10-day detraining ...
Read More
Background and Purpose: Obesity is associated with various metabolic and inflammatory impairments، the effects of which have not been sufficiently studied. Therefore، the purpose of this study was to examine the influence of an 8-week strength training and aerobic training program and a 10-day detraining on lipid profile and CRP in obese girls. Methods and Materials: In this experimental study، thirty-six obese female university students were voluntarily recruited and randomly assigned into three groups: control (n=11)، aerobic training or AT (n=12) and strength training or ST (n=13). ST and AT groups trained for 8 weeks، 4 times/week، 60 min/session، with 60 to 70% of 1 repetition maximum for ST، and 65 to 75% of HRmax for AT. Blood samples were taken at baseline، 24 hours after the last exercise session and after 10 days of detraining on fasting state. Data were analyzed in SPSS 16 using repeated measure analysis of variance (RM-ANOVA). The alpha level was established at P0.05). Also، no significant differences were found between the three groups (P>0.05). TC also decreased in AT and ST groups (9% and 19%، respectively); however، the change was not significant (P>0.05). After training no significant changes in HDL، HDL2، HDL3، LDL، and CRP were observed (P>0.05). Ten days of detraining also did not result in any significant alterations in the lipid profile or CRP (P>0.05). Conclusion: Eight weeks of aerobic and strength training have no significant effect on the lipid profile and CRP in obese girls.