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Heart Rate Variability Parameters and Their Use in Medicine
The autonomic nervous system plays an important role in various pathological situations such as myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure or diabetic neuropathy and is strongly implicated in the pathogenesis of…
Read more ›Methods for the Assessment of Functional and Structural Characteristics of the Arterial Wall
Tests of functional and structural properties of arteries are becoming clinically more and more relevant. Numerous non-invasive methods for assessing endothelial function and arterial stiffness have been developed, many of…
Read more ›Targeted Cancer Cell Therapy
Cancer patients today live longer and have a better quality of life. This is mainly due to a multidisciplinary approach in cancer diagnostics. A close collaboration between pathologists, who perform…
Read more ›New Indications and Development of Cannabis-based Medicines
Cannabis has a long history of consumption both for recreational and medicinal uses. After the discovery of endogenous cannabinoid system and cloning of cannabinoid receptors during the last decade of…
Read more ›Long-term Results of Proximal Femoral Reconstruction with the Kent Hip Endoprosthesis
BACKGROUNDS. Proximal femur reconstruction after removal of bone tissue due to various causes presents a major challenge for orthopaedic surgeons. One of the possible solutions is the Kent Hip endoprosthesis,…
Read more ›IgA Nephropathy – Two Case Reports
IgA nephropathy is the most common primary glomerulonephritis in adults and a common cause of end-stage renal failure. The understanding of the pathogenesis of IgA nephropathy has evolved importantly in…
Read more ›Acute Intermittent Porphyria in Pregnancy – Case Report
Acute intermittent porphyria is a rare inherited disease that is caused by the deficiency of one of the enzymes in the heme synthesis chain. Together with the accelerated metabolism of…
Read more ›Athlete’s Heart
Regular intensive physical exertion results in physiological cardiac adaptations named athlete's heart. Adaptations are functional and structural and depend on intensity and type of exercise, age, sex, body surface area,…
Read more ›Non-Motor Symptoms of Parkinson’s Disease
Parkinson's disease is traditionally regarded as a movement disorder caused by the loss of dopaminergic neurons in the nigrostriatal system. However, we are becoming more and more aware that pathology…
Read more ›The Role of Imaging in the Diagnosis of Cerebral Vein Thrombosis
Cerebral venous thrombosis is a rare but serious neurologic disorder manifested clinically with headache, focal neurological deficits, seizures, impairment of consciousness and papilledema. Causes and predisposing factors include local conditions…
Read more ›Surgical Treatment of Hypoplastic Left Heart Syndrome
Hypoplastic left heart syndrome is a congenital heart defect where only right ventricle remains functionally unimpaired. Soon after birth, the newborns become severely ill with cardiorespiratory collapse which is followed…
Read more ›From the Individual to the Family: Understanding and Applicability of Medical Family Therapy in Somatic Medicine
Modern medicine considers somatic illness and health as two parts of a biopsychosocial whole, while the systemic paradigm also includes the family context of the somatic illness and health. Attachment…
Read more ›Solid Angle Approach to Understanding Electroencephalography
The interpretation of the electroencephalographic signal is often limited to the assumption that the electrode placed directly above the source of the signal detects the largest potential, whereas more distant…
Read more ›The Use of Biocompatible PolyHIPE Acrylates for Bone Tissue Engineering
Tissue engineering as a relatively new field of regenerative medicine has already gone through early developmental stages in a way that it already gives some clinical results. In essence, tissue…
Read more ›Breast Cancer in Female Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus Patients: A Comparison of Pathohistological Characteristics and Stage in Regard to the Type of Treatment for Diabetes Mellitus
BACKGROUNDS. Type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) and breast cancer are common diseases in the developed world which share certain risk factors. There are several possible pathophysiological mechanisms which could explain…
Read more ›Medical Coverage of Sports and Recreational Mass Events
Sports competitions and massive recreational events are among the events at increased risk for injuries, sudden cardiovascular complications and other diseases associated with intense physical activity. Therefore, good organization of…
Read more ›Summary of Guidelines for Physical Activity in Children and Adolescents
Physical activity has a positive influence on many aspects of our general health. A healthy attitude towards physical activity develops before the age of twelve. An active lifestyle during childhood…
Read more ›The Characteristics of Competitive Youth Sport and Different Health Risks
The aim of this article is to present some characteristics of the competitive youth sport and to point out some negative aspects that represent possible health hazards to children and…
Read more ›Clinical Sports Nutriton: from Theory to Practice
The basic physiological purpose of sports clinical nutrition is to provide the energy in the form of metabolic fuels (nutrients) in the right quantity and at the right time for…
Read more ›Rehabilitation of Dominant Shoulder Dysfunction in Overhead Sports
Overhead athletes typically experience anatomical and biomechanical adaptive changes in the dominant shoulders. Adaptations are divided in three main groups: changes in glenohumeral rotator range of motion, malposition and dyskinesis…
Read more ›Differentiating between Athlete’s Heart and Cardiomyopathy
Regular intensive physical exertion results in physiological functional and structural adaptations termed athlete's heart. Physiological remodelling may occasionally overlap with pathological changes of subtle or early cardiomyopathy (especially hypertrophic, dilatative…
Read more ›Asthma and Sport in Adults
Exercise-induced bronchoconstriction is defined as reversible narrowing of distal airways that follows vigorous exercise in the presence or absence of clinically recognised asthma. The prevalence in general population is 7–20%,…
Read more ›Inadvertent Doping in Sport
Inadvertent doping is defined as an unintentional breach of anti-doping rules, which is often the result of professional errors, negligence or ignorance. Depending on etiology, inadvertent doping can be due…
Read more ›Autonomic Nervous System Activity During Physical Exercise
The autonomic nervous system plays a crucial role in the cardiovascular response to exercise. During exercise, oxygen uptake increases to meet increased energy consumption. Central command, baroreflex with its resetting,…
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