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Angelo Tremblay

Researcher at Laval University

Publications -  482
Citations -  35202

Angelo Tremblay is an academic researcher from Laval University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Weight loss & Body mass index. The author has an hindex of 86, co-authored 466 publications receiving 32751 citations. Previous affiliations of Angelo Tremblay include Hotel Dieu Hospital & D'Youville College.

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The response to exercise with constant energy intake in identical twins.

TL;DR: Even though there were large individual differences in response to the negative energy balance and exercise protocol, subjects with the same genotype were more alike in responses than subjects with different genotypes particularly for body fat, body energy, and abdominal visceral fat changes.
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Calcium intake, body composition, and lipoprotein-lipid concentrations in adults

TL;DR: In both sexes, a high calcium intake is associated with a plasma lipoprotein-lipid profile predictive of a lower risk of coronary heart disease risk compared with a low calcium intake.
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Increased risk for falling associated with obesity: mathematical modeling of postural control

TL;DR: The most striking observation is the nonlinear increase of torque needed to stabilize the humanoid when the motor response was chararterized by delayed temporal parameters, which suggests that, when submitted to daily postural stresses and perturbations, obese persons may be at higher risk of falling than lightweight individuals.
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Eating behaviors and indexes of body composition in men and women from the Québec family study.

TL;DR: It was found that disinhibition and susceptibility to hunger are positively associated with the level of obesity, which suggests that it is important to differentiate the subscales of cognitive dietary restraint.
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Obesity as a Disease: A White Paper on Evidence and Arguments Commissioned by the Council of The Obesity Society

TL;DR: The panel strongly endorsed the position that there can be no higher authority than reason and held that the opinions of authorita-tive bodies tell us—at most—what is law-ful, consistent with mainstream opinions, or likely to be supported by others.