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Tieh-Cheng Fu

Researcher at Memorial Hospital of South Bend

Publications -  63
Citations -  1148

Tieh-Cheng Fu is an academic researcher from Memorial Hospital of South Bend. The author has contributed to research in topics: Heart failure & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 51 publications receiving 916 citations. Previous affiliations of Tieh-Cheng Fu include Chang Gung University & Chang Gung Memorial Hospital.

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Effect of Kinesio taping on muscle strength in athletes-a pilot study.

TL;DR: Kinesio taping on the anterior thigh neither decreased nor increased muscle strength in healthy non-injured young athletes.
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Aerobic interval training improves oxygen uptake efficiency by enhancing cerebral and muscular hemodynamics in patients with heart failure

TL;DR: AIT effectively improves oxygen uptake efficiency by enhancing cerebral/muscular hemodynamics and suppresses oxidative stress/inflammation associated with cardiac dysfunction, and also promotes generic/disease-specific qualities of life in patients with HF.
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Aerobic Interval Training Elicits Different Hemodynamic Adaptations Between Heart Failure Patients with Preserved and Reduced Ejection Fraction.

TL;DR: Aerobic interval training effectively enhances cardiac hemodynamic response to exercise in HFrEF patients while increasing the delivery/use of O2 to exercising skeletal muscles and frontal cerebral lobe tissues in HFpEF patients, thereby improving global/disease-specific quality-of-life measures in these HF patients.
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Effects of Normoxic and Hypoxic Exercise Regimens on Cardiac, Muscular, and Cerebral Hemodynamics Suppressed by Severe Hypoxia in Humans

TL;DR: It is concluded that moderate hypoxic exercise training improves cardiopulmonary fitness and increases resistance to disturbance of cardiac hemodynamics by severe hypoxia, concurrence with enhancing O(2) delivery/utilization in skeletal muscles but not cerebral tissues.
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Suppression of cerebral hemodynamics is associated with reduced functional capacity in patients with heart failure.

TL;DR: It is concluded that the suppression of cerebral/muscle hemodynamics during exercise is associated with ventilatory abnormality, which reduces functional capacity in patients with HF.