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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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A major haplotype block at the rho-associated kinase 2 locus is associated with a lower risk of hypertension in a recessive manner: the HYPGENE study.
TL;DR: The data strongly suggest that a major haplotype block at the Rho-associated kinase 2 locus is recessively associated with a lower risk of hypertension.
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Polymorphism in exon 4 of the human 3β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase type I gene (HSD3B1) and blood pressure
TL;DR: A T-->C polymorphism at codon Leu(338) of exon 4 of the HSD3B1 gene is associated with elevated systolic and diastolic blood pressures, the pathogenic mechanism underlying this association is uncertain from the present data and further studies are warranted.
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Specificity of maximal aerobic power.
TL;DR: It is concluded that these five work tasks do not yield parallel test forms, that the practice of transforming one MAP value into another should be abandoned, and that thepractice of generalizing from oneMAP value to a theoretical general MAP of the human body is not justified.
Journal ArticleDOI
Trp64Arg mutation in β3-adrenoceptor gene of doubtful significance for obesity and insulin resistance
Pascale Mauriège,Claude Bouchard +1 more
Journal Article
Abstract P131: Racial Differences in the Response of Cardiorespiratory Fitness to Aerobic Exercise Training in Caucasian and African American Postmenopausal Women
Damon L. Swift,Neil M. Johannsen,Carl J. Lavie,Conrad P. Earnest,William D. Johnson,Claude Bouchard,Steve N. Blair,Timothy S. Church,Robert L. Newton +8 more
TL;DR: AA postmenopausal women, in general, had an attenuated increase in CRF (both relative and absolute) following exercise training, but had similar response rates compared with CA women.