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Claude Bouchard
Researcher at Pennington Biomedical Research Center
Publications - 1105
Citations - 121841
Claude Bouchard is an academic researcher from Pennington Biomedical Research Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Body mass index & Obesity. The author has an hindex of 153, co-authored 1076 publications receiving 115307 citations. Previous affiliations of Claude Bouchard include Texas A&M University & University of Texas at Austin.
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Menopause, estrogen, and training effects on exercise hemodynamics: the HERITAGE study.
John S. Green,Philip R. Stanforth,Jacques Gagnon,Arthur S. Leon,Dabeeru C. Rao,James S. Skinner,Claude Bouchard,Tuomo Rankinen,Jack H. Wilmore +8 more
TL;DR: It was concluded that hormone replacement may be associated with a vasodilatory reserve at high exercise intensities and that endurance exercise training elicits favorable hemodynamic and oxygen uptake adaptations during exercise that are, in most instances, independent of menstrual status or hormone replacement.
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A +2138InsCAGACC polymorphism of the melanocortin receptor 3 gene is associated in human with fat level and partitioning in interaction with body corpulence.
Nathalie Boucher,Christian-Marc Lanouette,M. Larose,Louis Pérusse,Claude Bouchard,Yvon C. Chagnon +5 more
TL;DR: A new +2138InsCAGACC MC3R polymorphism is associated with the level of adiposity and with body fat partitioning in interaction with corpulence in humans.
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Association between olfactory receptor genes, eating behavior traits and adiposity: results from the Quebec Family Study.
Anne C. Choquette,Luigi Bouchard,Vicky Drapeau,Simone Lemieux,Angelo Tremblay,Claude Bouchard,Marie-Claude Vohl,Louis Pérusse +7 more
TL;DR: The results are the first to suggest that variations in human olfactory receptor genes can influence eating behaviors and adiposity.
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Stability of adiposity phenotypes from childhood and adolescence into young adulthood with contribution of parental measures.
Peter T. Campbell,Peter T. Katzmarzyk,Robert M. Malina,D. C. Rao,Louis Pérusse,Claude Bouchard +5 more
TL;DR: Overall, parental measures offer less predictive value than do measures of childhood and adolescent body composition and adipose tissue distribution.