T
Tadej Debevec
Researcher at University of Ljubljana
Publications - 84
Citations - 1216
Tadej Debevec is an academic researcher from University of Ljubljana. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Hypoxia (medical). The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 64 publications receiving 844 citations. Previous affiliations of Tadej Debevec include University of Nottingham & University of Cape Town.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Hypoxia-Induced Oxidative Stress Modulation with Physical Activity
TL;DR: Recent findings on hypoxia-related oxidative stress modulation by different activity levels during prolonged hypoxic exposures are summarized and the potential mechanisms underlying the observed redox balance changes are examined.
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Therapeutic Use of Exercising in Hypoxia: Promises and Limitations
TL;DR: Recent evidences suggesting that exercising in hypoxia might be a valuable and viable “therapeutic strategy” are summarized and the benefits and risks/limitations in (i) hypertensive (ii) obese, (iii) elderly individuals are discussed.
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Effects of Robotic Knee Exoskeleton on Human Energy Expenditure
TL;DR: In this article, the effect of a performance augmenting exoskeleton on the metabolic cost of an able-bodied user/pilot during periodic squatting was investigated, and the effects of different non-invasive control strategies, such as gravity compensation, position-based and oscillator-based control, were compared.
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Separate and combined effects of 21-day bed rest and hypoxic confinement on body composition
Tadej Debevec,Tadej Debevec,Tarsi C. Bali,Elizabeth J. Simpson,Ian A. Macdonald,Ola Eiken,Igor B. Mekjavic +6 more
TL;DR: Exposure to simulated altitude of ~4,000 m does not seem to worsen the whole body mass and fat-free mass reductions or alter resting energy expenditure and appetite during a 21-day simulated microgravity.
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Moderate exercise blunts oxidative stress induced by normobaric hypoxic confinement.
TL;DR: Evidence is provided that 2 h of moderate daily exercise training can attenuate the oxidative stress induced by continuous hypoxic exposure, and this randomized prospective trial investigated whether the addition of moderate exercise can alter oxidative stressinduced by continuoushypoxic exposure.