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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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Non Linear Weight Gain with Long Term Overfeeding in Man

TL;DR: It is concluded that 1) TEE changes were related to body weight change, 2) about 65% of E were accounted for by physical activity, thermic effect of food, or some other components, and 3) the fraction of the energy surplus stored as body substances decreased with the duration of overfeeding.
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Acute effects of endurance exercise on human adipose tissue metabolism.

TL;DR: The results indicate that adipose tissue metabolic activities are selectively influenced by endurance exercise and suggest that these metabolic changes are not closely coupled with the amount of work performed in a prolonged exercise bout.
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About unsuspected potential determinants of obesity

TL;DR: The effects of low micronutrient intake, short sleep duration, knowledge-based work, and organochlorine compounds on components of energy balance and body composition are documents and suggest that body fat gain is not only a problem, but also a solution in maintaining body homeostasis.
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Sedentary behaviour, visceral fat accumulation and cardiometabolic risk in adults: a 6-year longitudinal study from the Quebec Family Study.

TL;DR: With the exception of waist circumference, the present study did not find evidence of a relationship between sedentary behaviour and any marker of cardiometabolic risk in this population of adult men and women.
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Physical fitness and the metabolic syndrome in adults from the Quebec Family Study.

TL;DR: In men and in women, the effects of physical fitness on the individual components of the metabolic syndrome were attenuated after considering total and abdominal adiposity, and fitness was negatively associated with most individual components, except HDL-cholesterol for which the correlation was positive.