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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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Effects of long-term negative energy balance with exercise on plasma lipid and lipoprotein levels in identical twins
TL;DR: The findings suggest that favorable changes in the lipid profile can be obtained through chronic negative energy balance achieved by clamping daily energy intake and adding daily moderate intensity exercise even in persons with relatively normal lipid levels at baseline.
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Long duration of stressful homework as a potential obesogenic factor in children: a QUALITY study.
TL;DR: To examine for the first time whether stressful mental tasks are associated with an unfavorable anthropometric profile in children, a large number of studies have found that they are not.
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Normalization of visceral adiposity is required to normalize plasma apolipoprotein B levels in response to a healthy eating/physical activity lifestyle modification program in viscerally obese men
Emilie Pelletier-Beaumont,Benoit J. Arsenault,Natalie Alméras,Jean Bergeron,Angelo Tremblay,Paul Poirier,Jean-Pierre Després +6 more
TL;DR: The results suggest that, in order to "normalize" apoB levels in response to a lifestyle modification program, viscerally obese dyslipidemic men need to achieve levels of VAT similar to healthy non-obese men.
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Ethnic Differences in Body Composition and Other Markers of Cardiovascular Disease Risk: Study in Matched Haitian and White Subjects from Quebec
Marie-Claude DésiletsM. Désilets,Dominique R. Garrel,Charles Couillard,Angelo Tremblay,Jean-Pierre Després,Claude Bouchard,Hélène Delisle +6 more
TL;DR: People of African descent may be at greater risk of metabolic syndrome compared with whites, and associations among MS markers, body composition, and resting metabolic rate in black Haitians and in white subjects living in Quebec, Canada are examined.
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Genetic pleiotropy for resting metabolic rate with fat-free mass and fat mass: the Québec Family Study.
TL;DR: This study supports the notion that the gene(s) affecting each of FFM and FM also influence the RMR, and suggests that RMR is an oligogenic trait that should be further investigated using more complex multivariate segregation methods until specific genes can be tested.