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D. Scott Kehler

Researcher at Dalhousie University

Publications -  40
Citations -  628

D. Scott Kehler is an academic researcher from Dalhousie University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Internal medicine. The author has an hindex of 10, co-authored 30 publications receiving 444 citations. Previous affiliations of D. Scott Kehler include St. Boniface General Hospital & University of Manitoba.

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The regulation of sarco(endo)plasmic reticulum calcium-ATPases (SERCA).

TL;DR: The regulatory mechanisms of the SERCA pump are examined, with a particular emphasis on the influence of exercise in preventing the pathological conditions associated with impaired SERCA function.
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Prehabilitation program for elective coronary artery bypass graft surgery patients: a pilot randomized controlled study:

TL;DR: Evidence is provided for the feasibility of a Prehab intervention to improve the health status of patients waiting for elective CABG surgery and for the safety and efficacy of Prehab in a larger trial of 92 patients.
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The impact of frailty on functional survival in patients 1 year after cardiac surgery.

TL;DR: The addition of frailty to the European System for Cardiac Operative Risk Evaluation II provides incremental value in identifying patients at risk of poor functional survival 1 year postsurgery, regardless of frailt definition.
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A systematic review of the association between sedentary behaviors with frailty.

TL;DR: Longitudinal studies are needed that adjust for physical activity when determining the association between sedentary behaviors and frailty, and the efficacy of sedentary behavior reduction outside of physical activity interventions to treat and reverse frailty should be tested.
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The association between bouts of moderate to vigorous physical activity and patterns of sedentary behavior with frailty.

TL;DR: These population‐level data give justification for determining if interventions which target short bouts of MVPA and interrupting prolonged, uninterrupted time spent in sedentary behaviors can treat or prevent frailty worsening.