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Browsing by Author "Djelic, Marina (36016384600)"

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    Hyperbaric oxygenation protects the kidney against ischemia-reperfusion injury
    (2020)
    Ivanov, Milan (56070414200)
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    Brkic, Predrag (14324307800)
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    Vajic, Una-Jovana (56263330000)
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    Mihailovic-Stanojevic, Nevena (15060354900)
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    Milacic, Davorka (57208773363)
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    Jovovic, Djurdjica (6701633329)
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    Karanovic, Danijela (56566528700)
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    Djelic, Marina (36016384600)
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    Jeremic, Rada (57208138933)
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    Miloradovic, Zoran (6505791938)
    Background: Acute kidney injury (AKI) as a consequence of ischemia is a common clinical event that can lead to unacceptably high morbidity and mortality. Hyperbaric oxygen (HBO2) preconditioning has been shown to prevent ischemia-reperfusion injury (IRI) in different tissues. Objectives: The aim of our study was to compare the effects of HBO2 preconditioning on renal hemodynamics, kidney function and oxidative stress in normotensive and spontaneously hypertensive rats that suffered kidney IRI. Methods: An experiment was performed on Wistar (normotensive) and spontaneously hypertensive rats (SHR). The animals were divided into the following experimental groups: sham-operated rats and rats with or without HBO2 preconditioning 24 hours before post-ischemic AKI induction. Treated rats were placed into experimental HBO2 chambers and exposed to pure oxygen twice a day for two consecutive days (2.026 bar of oxygen) for 60 minutes. AKI was performed the next morning. The right kidney was removed and the renal ischemia was performed by clamping the left renal artery for 45 minutes. Results: In this study, HBO2 preconditioning significantly improved disturbed renal hemodynamics, major markers of kidney function in plasma (creatinine, urea and phosphate) as well as antioxidant enzymes (superoxide dismutase and catalase) activities in erythrocytes after AKI induction. Also, HBO2 preconditioning decreased lipid peroxidation in plasma after ischemic AKI. Positive effects were observed in both strains of rats. Conclusions: Our results suggest that HBO2 treatment improves renal hemodynamic and kidney function and decreases oxidative stress of Wistar and SHR rats with an AKI episode. Furthermore, it also implies that pre-existing hypertension does not affect the beneficial effects of HBO2 preconditioning. Copyright © 2020 Undersea & Hyperbaric Medical Society, Inc.
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    Sport-specific influences on respiratory patterns in elite athletes; [Influências específicas do esporte nos padrões respiratórios em atletas de elite]
    (2015)
    Durmic, Tijana (57807942100)
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    Lazovic, Biljana (36647776000)
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    Djelic, Marina (36016384600)
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    Lazic, Jelena Suzic (37023567700)
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    Zikic, Dejan (55885785200)
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    Zugic, Vladimir (13410862400)
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    Dekleva, Milica (56194369000)
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    Mazic, Sanja (6508115084)
    Objective: To examine differences in lung function among sports that are of a similar nature and to determine which anthropometric/demographic characteristics correlate with lung volumes and flows. Methods: This was a cross-sectional study involving elite male athletes (N = 150; mean age, 21 ± 4 years) engaging in one of four different sports, classified according to the type and intensity of exercise involved. All athletes underwent full anthropometric assessment and pulmonary function testing (spirometry). Results: Across all age groups and sport types, the elite athletes showed spirometric values that were significantly higher than the reference values. We found that the values for FVC, FEV1, vital capacity, and maximal voluntary ventilation were higher in water polo players than in players of the other sports evaluated (p < 0.001). In addition, PEF was significantly higher in basketball players than in handball players (p < 0.001). Most anthropometric/ demographic parameters correlated significantly with the spirometric parameters evaluated. We found that BMI correlated positively with all of the spirometric parameters evaluated (p < 0.001), the strongest of those correlations being between BMI and maximal voluntary ventilation (r = 0.46; p < 0.001). Conversely, the percentage of body fat correlated negatively with all of the spirometric parameters evaluated, correlating most significantly with FEV1 (r = −0.386; p < 0.001). Conclusions: Our results suggest that the type of sport played has a significant impact on the physiological adaptation of the respiratory system. That knowledge is particularly important when athletes present with respiratory symptoms such as dyspnea, cough, and wheezing. Because sports medicine physicians use predicted (reference) values for spirometric parameters, the risk that the severity of restrictive disease or airway obstruction will be underestimated might be greater for athletes. © 2015 Sociedade Brasileira de Pneumologia e Tisiologia.
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    The impact of elevated blood pressure on exercise capacity in elite athletes
    (2015)
    Mazic, Sanja (6508115084)
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    Suzic Lazic, Jelena (37023567700)
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    Dekleva, Milica (56194369000)
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    Antic, Milena (56470487300)
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    Soldatovic, Ivan (35389846900)
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    Djelic, Marina (36016384600)
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    Nesic, Dejan (26023585700)
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    Acimovic, Tijana (57807942100)
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    Lazic, Milivoje (56470484100)
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    Lazovic, Biljana (36647776000)
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    Suzic, Slavica (57193378338)
    Objectives: Hypertension is one of the most prevalent cardiovascular disorders in athletes. The aims of our study were to assess the impact of elevated blood pressure (BP) on exercise capacity in athletes and evaluate the differences in left ventricular structure and function. Methods: Elite male athletes (n = 517, aged 23 ± 5 years) underwent Doppler echocardiography with tissue Doppler imaging. Diastolic function was assessed by measuring peak early and late transmitral (E and A) and annular diastolic filling velocities (e′ and a′). Maximal cardiopulmonary exercise testing was performed to measure maximal oxygen consumption (VO2max), ventilatory anaerobic threshold (VAT) and heart rate reserve (HRR). After BP measurement, they were grouped according to the ESH/ESC guidelines on: optimal (OBP), normal (NBP), high normal BP (HNBP), and hypertensive (HT). Results: We found significantly lower VO2max, VAT and HRR in the groups with HNBP and HT, after the adjustment for the type of sport, body fat content and age. There was an increasing trend in resting HR among groups (p < 0.001). Although none of the subjects had impaired diastolic function, the HT group had higher left atrial volume, and lower e′ and e′/a′. Resting systolic BP (p < 0.05), HR (p < 0.001), HRR (p < 0.001) and e′/a′ (p < 0.01) independently predicted VO2max. Indexes E/e′ and e′/a′ were associated with resting systolic BP (p < 0.05). Conclusion: Even in the absence of structural or functional heart damage, elevated BP in elite athletes, together with the presence of autonomic dysfunction, leads to decrease in exercise capacity. Staging of hypertension according to the BP level, on the one hand, and reflexion of BP on cardiopulmonary capacity, on the other, may be coupled for further risk stratification. © 2014 Elsevier Ireland Ltd. All rights reserved.
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    The Impact of White-Coat Hypertension on Cardiac Mechanics
    (2016)
    Tadic, Marijana (36455305000)
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    Cuspidi, Cesare (7005373860)
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    Ivanovic, Branislava (24169010000)
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    Vukomanovic, Vladan (57144261800)
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    Djelic, Marina (36016384600)
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    Celic, Vera (57132602400)
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    Kocijancic, Vesna (55848931900)
    The authors aimed to investigate right ventricular (RV) and left ventricular (LV) remodeling in patients with white-coat hypertension (WCH) and sustained arterial hypertension. This cross-sectional study included 153 untreated patients who underwent 24-hour ambulatory blood pressure (BP) monitoring and complete two-dimensional echocardiographic (2DE) examination. Results showed that LV and RV longitudinal mechanics gradually deteriorated from controls to patients with sustained hypertension. Endocardial RV longitudinal strain was lower in WCH and hypertensive patients than in controls. Midmyocardial RV longitudinal strain was decreased in hypertensive patients compared with the other two groups, whereas subepicardial RV longitudinal strain was similar between the observed groups. Twenty-four–hour systolic BP was associated with 2DE global longitudinal LV and subendocardial RV strain. This study demonstrates that myocardial deformation of both ventricles is significantly impaired in patients with WCH and sustained arterial hypertension, and 24-hour systolic BP is associated with LV and RV deformation independent of cardiac structure. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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    The training type influence on male elite athletes' ventilatory function
    (2017)
    Durmic, Tijana (57807942100)
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    Lazovic Popovic, Biljana (36647776000)
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    Zlatkovic Svenda, Mirjana (16067770800)
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    Djelic, Marina (36016384600)
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    Zugic, Vladimir (13410862400)
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    Gavrilovic, Tamara (57193671033)
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    Mihailovic, Zoran (6508333902)
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    Zdravkovic, Marija (24924016800)
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    Leischik, Roman (6701365388)
    Background/aim To assess and compare measured ventilatory volumes (forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV 1), peak expirium flow (PEF) and maximal voluntary ventilation (MVV)), ventilatory function capacities (forced vital capacity (FVC) and vital capacity (VC)) and FEV 1 /VC ratio in a sample of power and endurance elite athletes and their age-matched and sex-matched sedentary control group. Methods A cross-sectional study was applied on male elite athletes (n=470) who were classified according to the type of the predominantly performed exercise in the following way: group 1: endurance group (EG=270), group 2: power athletes group (SG=200) and group 3: sedentary control group (CG=100). The lung VC, FVC, FEV 1, FEV 1 /FVC ratio, PEF and MVV were measured in all of the observed subjects, who were also classified with regard to body mass index (BMI) and the percentage of the body fat (BF%). Results The CG had the highest BF% value, while the endurance group had the lowest BMI and BF% value, which is significantly different from the other two groups (p<0.05). The observed values of VC, FVC and FEV 1 in the EG were significantly higher than those from the other two groups (p<0.05). There were no differences concerning the observed FEV 1 /FVC ratio. Conclusions A continued endurance physical activity leads to adaptive changes in spirometric parameters (VC, FVC and FEV 1), highlighting the fact that there is a need for specific consideration of different respiratory pattern' development in different types of sport, which also has to be further evaluated. © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2017. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.
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    The training type influence on male elite athletes' ventilatory function
    (2017)
    Durmic, Tijana (57807942100)
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    Lazovic Popovic, Biljana (36647776000)
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    Zlatkovic Svenda, Mirjana (16067770800)
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    Djelic, Marina (36016384600)
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    Zugic, Vladimir (13410862400)
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    Gavrilovic, Tamara (57193671033)
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    Mihailovic, Zoran (6508333902)
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    Zdravkovic, Marija (24924016800)
    ;
    Leischik, Roman (6701365388)
    Background/aim To assess and compare measured ventilatory volumes (forced expiratory volume in 1 s (FEV 1), peak expirium flow (PEF) and maximal voluntary ventilation (MVV)), ventilatory function capacities (forced vital capacity (FVC) and vital capacity (VC)) and FEV 1 /VC ratio in a sample of power and endurance elite athletes and their age-matched and sex-matched sedentary control group. Methods A cross-sectional study was applied on male elite athletes (n=470) who were classified according to the type of the predominantly performed exercise in the following way: group 1: endurance group (EG=270), group 2: power athletes group (SG=200) and group 3: sedentary control group (CG=100). The lung VC, FVC, FEV 1, FEV 1 /FVC ratio, PEF and MVV were measured in all of the observed subjects, who were also classified with regard to body mass index (BMI) and the percentage of the body fat (BF%). Results The CG had the highest BF% value, while the endurance group had the lowest BMI and BF% value, which is significantly different from the other two groups (p<0.05). The observed values of VC, FVC and FEV 1 in the EG were significantly higher than those from the other two groups (p<0.05). There were no differences concerning the observed FEV 1 /FVC ratio. Conclusions A continued endurance physical activity leads to adaptive changes in spirometric parameters (VC, FVC and FEV 1), highlighting the fact that there is a need for specific consideration of different respiratory pattern' development in different types of sport, which also has to be further evaluated. © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2017. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.
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    Unfavourable plasma and erythrocyte phospholipid fatty acid profile in elite amateur boxers
    (2013)
    Tepsic, Jasna (14065598200)
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    Vucic, Vesna (14049380100)
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    Arsic, Aleksandra (14031166400)
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    Mazic, Sanja (6508115084)
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    Djelic, Marina (36016384600)
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    Glibetic, Marija (55431025500)
    Research on possible physiological changes as a consequence of a specific lifestyle and long-term strenuous exercise in boxing has been sparse. We determined plasma and erythrocyte phospholipid (PL) fatty acids (FA) profile of 16 elite amateur male boxers (22.4±3.3 years of age), and compared them with a control group composed of 19 sedentary (24.4±3.4) year-old men. The percentages of total saturated fatty acids (SFA) and monosaturated FA in plasma phospholipids were significantly higher (P <0.001) in boxers compared to the control group. On the other hand, all studied polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) in plasma PL with the exception of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA, 20:5, n-3) and docosatetraenoic acid (DTA, 22:4, n-6) were significantly lower in boxers than in sedentary men. Total PUFA, n-6 PUFA and n-3 PUFA were also significantly lower in boxers (P <0.001), whereas the n-6/n-3 ratio was higher in boxers than in control group (P <0.01). Boxers had significantly higher proportion of all SFA in erythrocyte PL compared to the control group (P <0.05). In addition, the percentage of linoleic acid was lower in boxers' erythrocyte PL than in the control group (P <0.05). The results show two potentially unfavourable main features of the FA profile of boxers, that is, a higher n-6/n-3 ratio in plasma PL and a higher percentage of SFA in both plasma and erythrocyte phospholipids compared to controls. As SFA correlates directly with the incidence of cardiovascular disease and high n-6/n-3 ratio has been shown to stimulate carcinogenesis and modulate inflammation and autoimmunity, this profile could be detrimental to the health of boxers. The mechanism underlying these differences requires further investigation; however the results suggest benefits of nutritional intervention. © 2013 Copyright European College of Sport Science.
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    Unfavourable plasma and erythrocyte phospholipid fatty acid profile in elite amateur boxers
    (2013)
    Tepsic, Jasna (14065598200)
    ;
    Vucic, Vesna (14049380100)
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    Arsic, Aleksandra (14031166400)
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    Mazic, Sanja (6508115084)
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    Djelic, Marina (36016384600)
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    Glibetic, Marija (55431025500)
    Research on possible physiological changes as a consequence of a specific lifestyle and long-term strenuous exercise in boxing has been sparse. We determined plasma and erythrocyte phospholipid (PL) fatty acids (FA) profile of 16 elite amateur male boxers (22.4±3.3 years of age), and compared them with a control group composed of 19 sedentary (24.4±3.4) year-old men. The percentages of total saturated fatty acids (SFA) and monosaturated FA in plasma phospholipids were significantly higher (P <0.001) in boxers compared to the control group. On the other hand, all studied polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) in plasma PL with the exception of eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA, 20:5, n-3) and docosatetraenoic acid (DTA, 22:4, n-6) were significantly lower in boxers than in sedentary men. Total PUFA, n-6 PUFA and n-3 PUFA were also significantly lower in boxers (P <0.001), whereas the n-6/n-3 ratio was higher in boxers than in control group (P <0.01). Boxers had significantly higher proportion of all SFA in erythrocyte PL compared to the control group (P <0.05). In addition, the percentage of linoleic acid was lower in boxers' erythrocyte PL than in the control group (P <0.05). The results show two potentially unfavourable main features of the FA profile of boxers, that is, a higher n-6/n-3 ratio in plasma PL and a higher percentage of SFA in both plasma and erythrocyte phospholipids compared to controls. As SFA correlates directly with the incidence of cardiovascular disease and high n-6/n-3 ratio has been shown to stimulate carcinogenesis and modulate inflammation and autoimmunity, this profile could be detrimental to the health of boxers. The mechanism underlying these differences requires further investigation; however the results suggest benefits of nutritional intervention. © 2013 Copyright European College of Sport Science.
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    United in prevention-electrocardiographic screening for chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
    (2013)
    Lazovic, Biljana (36647776000)
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    Mazic, Sanja (6508115084)
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    Stajic, Zoran (24170215000)
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    Djelic, Marina (36016384600)
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    Zlatkovic-Svenda, Mirjana (16067770800)
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    Putnikovic, Biljana (6602601858)
    Introduction: P-wave abnormalities on the resting electrocardiogram have been associated with cardiovascular or pulmonary disease. So far, "Gothic" P wave and verticalization of the frontal plane axis is related to lung disease, particularly obstructive lung disease. Aim: We tested if inverted P wave in AVl as a lone criteria of P wave axis >70o could be screening tool for emphysema. Material and method: 1095 routine electrocardiograms (ECGs) were reviewed which yielded 478 (82,1%) ECGs with vertical P-axis in sinus rhythm. Charts were reviewed for the diagnosis of COPD and emphysema based on medical history and pulmonary function tests. Conclusion: Electrocardiogram is very effective screening tool not only in cardiovascular field but in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The verticality of the P axis is usually immediately apparent, making electrocardiogram rapid screening test for emphysema. © AVICENA 2013.

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