#62. Interaction of exercise with muscle circadian clocks with Professor Karyn Esser

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  • čas přidán 5. 08. 2024
  • Dr Glenn McConell chats with Professor Karyn Esser from the University of Florida, USA. She is an authority on circadian biology. We discuss whether exercise affects muscle circadian clocks and whether muscle clocks affect exercise. What is the best time to exercise and to eat etc. Also the effects of jet lag and shift work and how to best manage these. A very interesting chat. Karyn’s Twitter: @kaesser.
    0:00. Introduction
    2:30. How Karyn got into exercise research.
    4:40. She was “picked up” by Arnold Schwarzenegger
    5:32. Her muscle hypertrophy work
    7:00. What are circadian rhythms?
    9:40. Jet lag
    11:10. How central clocks and peripheral clocks interact
    14:16. Social jet lag
    15:45. Timing of running rodents because nocturnal
    16:47. Best to wear sunglasses when jet lagged?
    17:54. Melatonin
    19:40. Muscle clocks prepare the muscle
    26:54. Sleep onset and dark onset are not necessarily correlated
    30:23. Time of day and exercise performance
    34:10. Running in the morning can shift muscle clocks forward
    37:00. Train at the time of the race
    39:25. Contracting muscle cells and circadian rhythms
    41:00. Timing of eating and muscle circadian rhythms
    43:00. How long does it take to shift clocks/jet jag
    45:10. Exercise: morning people vs evening people
    47:58. Stronger in the afternoon
    50:30. Shift work and eating during the night
    54:30. Best to do rotating or constant routine shift work?
    55:57. Best time to exercise if shift worker?
    57:55. Clocks are disrupted in diabetes
    1:00:00. Researchers need to consider circadian rhythms
    1:03:42. Is there circadian rhythm cross talk between organs?
    1:06:03. Inflammation, muscle and circadian rhythms
    1:08:12. The heart and circadian rhythms
    1:11:30. Bone-muscle cross talk and circadian rhythms
    1:13:28. Sex differences and circadian rhythms
    1:15:00. Applicability of mouse studies to humans
    1:16:42. Controversies in the field
    1:17:52. Takeaway messages
    1:20:12. Outro (9 seconds)
    Inside Exercise brings to you the who's who of research in exercise metabolism, exercise physiology and exercise’s effects on health. With scientific rigor, these researchers discuss popular exercise topics while providing practical strategies for all.
    The interviewer, Emeritus Professor Glenn McConell, has an international research profile following 30 years of Exercise Metabolism research experience while at The University of Melbourne, Ball State University, Monash University, the University of Copenhagen and Victoria University.
    He has published over 120 peer reviewed journal articles and recently edited an Exercise Metabolism eBook written by world experts on 17 different topics (link.springer.com/book/10.100....
    Connect with Inside Exercise and Glenn McConell at:
    Twitter: @Inside_exercise and @GlennMcConell1
    Instagram: insideexercise
    Facebook: Glenn McConell
    LinkedIn: Glenn McConell / glenn-mcconell-83475460
    ResearchGate: Glenn McConell
    Email: glenn.mcconell@gmail.com
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    Not medical advice
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Komentáře • 3

  • @Visualize630
    @Visualize630 Před 11 měsíci +1

    light fullbody exercises throughout the day for that light pump & tightness is such a boost enhance your capacity for energy its profound how alive & alert Especially A amazing state of nirvana Blissfulness wholesomeness. Its literally Maintenance for this machine we're blessed to inhabit for now. Circulation & makes you Easly fit & confidently prepared for anything is the whole picture ♥

  • @joshhall470
    @joshhall470 Před 8 měsíci

    What about sleeping in heat to avoid predators or once the sun comes up to stay warm

  • @stephen_pfrimmer
    @stephen_pfrimmer Před 11 měsíci

    These are inherited anticipatory autonomic responses of living things to a planet that has rotated on its axis in this solar system for as long as living things, single- and multicellular sentient beings, have been reproducing (3 or so billion years)?