M
Malika Bouhaddi
Researcher at University of Franche-Comté
Publications - 50
Citations - 2031
Malika Bouhaddi is an academic researcher from University of Franche-Comté. The author has contributed to research in topics: Heart rate & Baroreflex. The author has an hindex of 19, co-authored 45 publications receiving 1858 citations.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Comparison of various techniques used to estimate spontaneous baroreflex sensitivity (the EuroBaVar study)
Dominique Laude,Jean Luc Elghozi,Arlette Girard,Elisabeth Bellard,Malika Bouhaddi,Paolo Castiglioni,Catherine Cerutti,Andrei Cividjian,Marco Di Rienzo,Jacques Olivier Fortrat,Ben J. A. Janssen,John M. Karemaker,Georges Lefthériotis,Gianfranco Parati,Pontus B. Persson,Alberto Porta,Luc Quintin,Jacques Regnard,Heinz Rüdiger,Harald M. Stauss +19 more
TL;DR: The discrepancies between procedures show that the choice of parameters and data handling should be considered before BRS estimation, and new techniques with this set of results are needed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Decrease in heart rate variability with overtraining: assessment by the Poincaré plot analysis.
Laurent Mourot,Malika Bouhaddi,Stéphane Perrey,Sylvie Cappelle,Marie-Thérèse Henriet,Jean-Pierre Wolf,Jean-Denis Rouillon,Jacques Regnard +7 more
TL;DR: Poincaré plot parameters are suggested to be used to indicate fatigue and/or prevent OT and corroborate the traditional time‐ and frequency‐domain analysis assessment of HRV.
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Quantitative Poincaré plot analysis of heart rate variability: effect of endurance training
TL;DR: It is suggested that Poincaré plot parameters as well as the "width" of the scatter gram could be considered as surrogates of time- and frequency-domain analysis to assess training-induced changes in HRV.
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Short- and long-term effects of a single bout of exercise on heart rate variability: comparison between constant and interval training exercises
TL;DR: The short-term HRV recovery seemed dependent on the type of exercise, contrary to the long-term recovery, and a persistent tachycardia continued to be observed in the upright posture, together with reduced TP values, showing that cardiovascular functions were still disturbed.
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Effects of the cold pressor test on cardiac autonomic control in normal subjects.
TL;DR: Traditional spectral analysis together with the non-linear detrended fluctuation analysis was used to study the autonomic control of HR during a 3-min cold pressor test to explain why healthy subjects react differently to the CPT and if this has potential clinical implications.