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Jochen Kressler

Researcher at San Diego State University

Publications -  37
Citations -  553

Jochen Kressler is an academic researcher from San Diego State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Postprandial & Spinal cord injury. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 33 publications receiving 429 citations. Previous affiliations of Jochen Kressler include Georgia Institute of Technology & Miami Project to Cure Paralysis.

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Understanding therapeutic benefits of overground bionic ambulation: exploratory case series in persons with chronic, complete spinal cord injury.

TL;DR: OBA training improved mobility in the OBA device without significant changes in exercise conditioning or in neuromuscular or cortical activity, and opens the possibility to reduce the common consequences of chronic, complete SCI such as reduced functional mobility and neuropathic pain.
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Quercetin and endurance exercise capacity: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

TL;DR: On average, quercetin provides a statistically significant benefit in human endurance exercise capacity (VO(2max) and endurance exercise performance), but the effect is between trivial and small.
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Reducing cardiometabolic disease in spinal cord injury.

TL;DR: Multitherapy strategies will likely be needed to control challenging component risks, such as gain in body mass, which has far reaching implications for maintenance of daily function as well as health.
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Evidence-based and heuristic approaches for customization of care in cardiometabolic syndrome after spinal cord injury.

TL;DR: The over-arching purpose of the monograph is to create an operational framework in which existing evidence-based approaches or heuristic modeling becomes best practice, and persons with SCI can lead more active and healthy lives.
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Metabolic Responses to 4 Different Body Weight-Supported Locomotor Training Approaches in Persons With Incomplete Spinal Cord Injury

TL;DR: DGO and TM walking training was less effective in increasing V˙o2 and velocity across participant-selected walking speeds, while TS and OG training was more effective in improving these parameters and also walking economy.