1.Effects of Three-Week Stair Climbing Exercise for Weight Control: A Case Series Study.
Juheon CHOI ; Kyungmo KANG ; Jong Seung KIM ; Bumjo OH
The Korean Journal of Sports Medicine 2016;34(2):185-189
This study is designed to check whether everyday-life stair climbing, which is a low-cost and readily accessible form of exercise, is effective for reducing overweight of sedentary people in various health indicators. We selected four overweight people and measured body weight, body fat percentage, muscle quantity, pulmonary function, lower-extremity strength and volume of thigh muscle and fat. After 3-week exercise of climbing stairs in more than 5 minutes twice a day, same procedures were taken. Body weight was reduced by 3.35 kg on average (standard deviation [SD], 0.79), and body fat mass by 2.53 kg (SD, 1.36). Lower extremity strength improved about 5%, and slight loss of thigh fat (right 3.2%; left 13.4%) was observed. However, pulmonary function and muscle quantity did not grow significantly. Although only four people may not be representative as targets, but it is suggested that stair climbing has sufficient utility as an easily accessible exercise.
Adipose Tissue
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Body Weight
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Lower Extremity
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Overweight
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Respiratory Function Tests
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Sedentary Lifestyle
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Thigh
2.A Twenty-Minute Nap Boosts the Planning Domain of Executive Function in Sleep Deprived Late Adolescents.
Kyungmo KANG ; Juheon CHOI ; Hee jin HWANG ; Dae Lim KOO ; Jong Seung KIM ; Bumjo OH
Journal of Sleep Medicine 2017;14(1):18-22
OBJECTIVES: The positive effects of nap on cognitive function and memory have been researched intensively among children and adults. However, the relationship between afternoon nap and executive function among sleep deprived late adolescents has not been studied as much. METHODS: Ten sleep deprived, otherwise healthy Korean high school students were recruited, and asked to fill out Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index questionnaire. They were put to nap for 5 min on three days during the first week, then for 10, 20, and 30 min in the same protocol during the consecutive weeks. After a 1-h class, both the students themselves and their corresponding teachers evaluated the participation level of the participants. They were then divided into two groups, and were instructed to play iPad game ‘Free Flow’. One group took a nap while the other group was prohibited from taking a nap. Both groups were instructed to play the game again. This was repeated once every afternoon for three days. RESULTS: The experiment showed that 20-min nap was superior in subjective evaluations to the other nap duration, and the mean game score differences before and after were significantly higher in the nap taking group after the 20-min nap when analyzed using non-parametric statistical method (p-value 0.04). CONCLUSIONS: Therefore, 20-min nap is likely to boost planning domain of executive function on sleep deprived late adolescents.
Adolescent*
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Adult
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Child
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Cognition
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Executive Function*
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Humans
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Memory
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Methods
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Sleep Deprivation