P
Philip J. Hennis
Researcher at Nottingham Trent University
Publications - 33
Citations - 1052
Philip J. Hennis is an academic researcher from Nottingham Trent University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Aerobic exercise. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 27 publications receiving 645 citations. Previous affiliations of Philip J. Hennis include University College London Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust & Newcastle University.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Mental health and movement behaviour during the COVID-19 pandemic in UK university students: Prospective cohort study
Matthew J. Savage,Ruth M. James,Daniele Magistro,James Donaldson,Laura C. Healy,Mary E. Nevill,Philip J. Hennis +6 more
TL;DR: The COVID-19 pandemic is negatively impacting the mental health and movement behaviour of UK university students, though no association between these constructs was identified.
Journal ArticleDOI
The physiological effects of hypobaric hypoxia versus normobaric hypoxia: a systematic review of crossover trials
TL;DR: This systematic review is the first to present an overview of the current available literature regarding crossover studies relating to the different effects of HH and NH on human physiology and reports a number of variables that were different between the two conditions, lending support to the notion that true physiological difference is indeed present.
Journal ArticleDOI
Cardiopulmonary exercise testing for the evaluation of perioperative risk in non-cardiopulmonary surgery
TL;DR: It is illustrated that CPET has the capacity to identify patients at increased risk of adverse outcome before a range of non-cardiopulmonary surgical procedures, and may be used in combination with non-CPET variables to increase perioperative risk prediction accuracy.
Journal ArticleDOI
Metabolic basis to Sherpa altitude adaptation.
James A. Horscroft,Aleksandra O. Kotwica,Verena Laner,James A. West,Philip J. Hennis,Denny Z. H. Levett,David J. Howard,Bernadette O. Fernandez,Sarah L. Burgess,Zsuzsanna Ament,Edward Gilbert-Kawai,A. Vercueil,Blaine Landis,Kay Mitchell,Monty G. Mythen,Cristina Branco,Randall S. Johnson,Martin Feelisch,Martin Feelisch,Hugh Montgomery,Julian L. Griffin,Michael P.W. Grocott,Michael P.W. Grocott,Michael P.W. Grocott,Erich Gnaiger,Daniel Martin,Andrew J. Murray +26 more
TL;DR: Study of Sherpas and native Lowlanders found metabolic adaptations that allow their tissues to use oxygen more efficiently, thereby conserving muscle energy levels at high altitude, and possibly contributing to the superior performance of elite climbing Sherpas at extreme altitudes.
Journal ArticleDOI
Mental Health and Movement Behaviour During the COVID-19 Pandemic in UK University Students: Prospective Cohort Study
Matthew J. Savage,Ruth M. James,Daniele Magistro,James Donaldson,Laura C. Healy,Mary E. Nevill,Philip J. Hennis +6 more
TL;DR: The COVID-19 pandemic is having detrimental effects on the mental health and movement behaviour of university students in the UK, however, these two constructs seem to be changing independently of one another.