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David W. Dunstan
Researcher at Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute
Publications - 439
Citations - 42745
David W. Dunstan is an academic researcher from Baker IDI Heart and Diabetes Institute. The author has contributed to research in topics: Sitting & Population. The author has an hindex of 91, co-authored 403 publications receiving 37901 citations. Previous affiliations of David W. Dunstan include Swinburne University of Technology & Arizona State University.
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Independent and joint associations of TV viewing time and snack food consumption with the metabolic syndrome and its components; a cross-sectional study in Australian adults
TL;DR: TV viewing time and snack food consumption are independently and jointly associated with the MetS and its components, particularly in women, and population strategies targeting MetS prevention should address high TV time and excessive snack food intake.
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Cardiometabolic Impact of Changing Sitting, Standing, and Stepping in the Workplace
Elisabeth A. H. Winkler,Sebastien F. M. Chastin,Elizabeth G. Eakin,Neville Owen,Anthony D. LaMontagne,Marj Moodie,Paddy C. Dempsey,Bronwyn A. Kingwell,David W. Dunstan,Genevieve N. Healy +9 more
TL;DR: Improvements in several cardiometabolic health risk biomarkers were significantly associated with sitting reductions that occurred in a workplace intervention, and appeared to occur with long-term changes, and when increasing ambulatory activities.
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Distinct effects of acute exercise and breaks in sitting on working memory and executive function in older adults: A three-arm, randomised cross-over trial to evaluate the effects of exercise with and without breaks in sitting on cognition
Michael Wheeler,Daniel J. Green,Kathryn A. Ellis,Ester Cerin,Ilkka Heinonen,Louise H. Naylor,Robyn N. Larsen,Patrik Wennberg,Carl-Johan Boraxbekk,Jaye Lewis,Nina Eikelis,Nicola T. Lautenschlager,Bronwyn A. Kingwell,Gavin W. Lambert,Neville Owen,David W. Dunstan +15 more
TL;DR: A morning bout of moderate-intensity exercise improves serum BDNF and working memory or executive function in older adults, depending on whether or not subsequent sitting is also interrupted with intermittent light-intensity walking.
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Sedentary Behaviors and Emerging Cardiometabolic Biomarkers in Adolescents
David Martínez-Gómez,David Martínez-Gómez,Joey C. Eisenmann,Genevieve N. Healy,Sonia Gómez-Martínez,L Esperanza Diaz,David W. Dunstan,David W. Dunstan,Oscar L. Veiga,Ascensión Marcos +9 more
TL;DR: High TV viewing time may play a key role in cardiovascular and metabolic diseases through the cell adhesion molecules in adolescence.
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The effectiveness of sedentary behaviour interventions on sitting time and screen time in children and adults: an umbrella review of systematic reviews
Phuong Nguyen,Long Khanh-Dao Le,Dieu Nguyen,Lan Gao,Lan Gao,David W. Dunstan,David W. Dunstan,Marj Moodie +7 more
TL;DR: The current systematic reviews and meta-analyses supported sedentary behaviour interventions for reducing occupational sitting time in particular, with small changes seen in screen time in children and adolescents.