Molecular Exercise Physiology: An Introduction

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Henning Wackerhage
Routledge, 2014 - 323 Seiten

Molecular Exercise Physiology: An Introduction is the first student-friendly textbook to be published on this key topic in contemporary sport and exercise science. It introduces sport and exercise genetics and the molecular mechanisms by which exercise causes adaptation. The text is linked to real life sport and exercise science situations such as 'what makes people good at distance running?', 'what DNA sequence variations code for a high muscle mass?' or 'by what mechanisms does exercise improve type2 diabetes?'

The book includes a full range of useful features, such as summaries, definitions of key terms, guides to further reading, review questions, personal comments by molecular exercise pioneers (Booth, Bouchard) and leading research in the field, as well as descriptions of research methods. A companion website offers interactive and downloadable resources for both student and lecturers.

Structured around central themes in sport and exercise science, such as nutrition, endurance training, resistance training, exercise & chronic disease and ageing, this book is the perfect foundation around which to build a complete upper-level undergraduate or postgraduate course on molecular exercise physiology.

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Autoren-Profil (2014)

Henning Wackerhage did his undergraduate degree and PhD at the German Sports University in Cologne. In 1996 he took up a position as a Lecturer in Exercise Physiology at the University of Central Lancashire, where he developed the Exercise Physiology teaching. In 2000 he moved to the University of Dundee and in 2003 he moved further North to Aberdeen as a Senior Lecturer in Molecular Exercise Physiology at the University of Aberdeen. He was the first convener of the BASES Molecular Exercise Physiology interest group. His research interest is the molecular regulation of skeletal muscle adaptation, searching for an answer to the question âhow does training work?â

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