This collection includes both ASU Theses and Dissertations, submitted by graduate students, and the Barrett, Honors College theses submitted by undergraduate students. 

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Sedentary behavior and excessive weight gain have been proven to deteriorate many characteristics of muscle. Low muscular power and mass with excess fat mass are risk factors for a multitude of chronic conditions and functional disabilities. Resistance training (RT) has long been accepted as a rehabilitative method of maintaining or

Sedentary behavior and excessive weight gain have been proven to deteriorate many characteristics of muscle. Low muscular power and mass with excess fat mass are risk factors for a multitude of chronic conditions and functional disabilities. Resistance training (RT) has long been accepted as a rehabilitative method of maintaining or enhancing muscular performance and composition. There are various methods of determining lower extremity muscular power; however, isokinetic dynamometry has emerged as one of the most accurate and reliable methods in clinical and research settings. Likewise, various methods exist for determining muscle thickness; however, many of those methods are expensive and can expose individuals to radiation. Ultrasonography has emerged as an accurate and reliable alternative to measuring lower extremity muscle thickness. The objective of this study was to assess the effects of high-load/low-volume (HLLV) and low-load/high-volume (LLHV) RT on isokinetic knee extensor and flexor peak power in sedentary, RT naïve, overweight or obese men and women (Body Mass Index ≥ 25 kg/m2). Twenty-one subjects (n = 21) completed this study and were randomized into one of the following groups: control, a HLLV group that performed three sets of 5 repetitions for all exercises until volitional fatigue, and LLHV which performed three sets of 15 repetitions for all exercises until volitional fatigue. Subjects randomized to the RT groups performed full-body exercises routines on three non-consecutive days per week. Changes in isokinetic knee extensor and flexor peak power, quadriceps ultrasound muscle thickness, and right leg segment of dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry (DEXA) scans were measured before and after the 12-week RT intervention. There were no significant differences found in group, time or, group by time interactions for knee extensor and flexor peak power using isokinetic dynamometry. Other than a group interaction for vastus intermedius muscle thickness (P=0.008), no significant interactions or differences were observed for any of the other variables tested. Based on the results of this study, neither high- nor low-load RT resulted in significant differences between intervention groups in peak power of the knee extensors and flexor, muscle thickness changes of the vastus intermedius, and vastus lateralis and, in the right lower extremity segmented body composition measures using DEXA.
ContributorsSarellis, Sofoklis Demetrios (Author) / Ofori, Edward (Thesis advisor) / Angadi, Siddhartha (Committee member) / Gaesser, Glenn (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2020
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Description
The ability to walk while completing a secondary task, dual-task walking (DTW), poses notable challenges for individuals affected by neurological disorders, such as multiple sclerosis (MS), who experience both cognitive and motor problems secondary to their disease. However, DTW is an everyday activity that has putative importance for optimal function.

The ability to walk while completing a secondary task, dual-task walking (DTW), poses notable challenges for individuals affected by neurological disorders, such as multiple sclerosis (MS), who experience both cognitive and motor problems secondary to their disease. However, DTW is an everyday activity that has putative importance for optimal function. Although some research in the past decade has begun to examine changes in DTW in MS, there is still limited work to understand the predictors of DTW, the factors that might moderate relationships between baseline cognitive and motor function and DTW ability, and its consequences (e.g., for quality of life [QoL] or fall risk). To contribute to the understanding of these phenomena and their intersections, three secondary data analyses of two relatively large data sets in the area were conducted to address five major aims. The first step was to identify of the most relevant of these inherently involved domains (cognitive [aim 1] and motor [aim 2] abilities). Lasso regression for inference was performed to address this question for both cognitive (South Shore Neurologic Associates, PC data) and motor (University of Kansas Medical Center [KUMC] data) domains. Next, evaluations to explore the moderating role of the psychological impacts that are common in MS (e.g., depression and falls self-efficacy) were undertaken to determine whether the relationships between cognitive and motor function and DTW ability are different for individuals with different levels of these factors using regression with factor scores performed with each data set (aim 3). As a final step, relationships between DTW and distal outcomes like QoL (cross-sectionally using both data sets and factor score regression; aim 4) and falls (cross-sectionally and longitudinally using KUMC data and negative binomial regression; aim 5). These studies contribute to the corpus of knowledge about DTW in MS in needed ways.
ContributorsVan Liew, Charles (Author) / Peterson, Daniel S (Thesis advisor) / Ofori, Edward (Committee member) / Der Ananian, Cheryl (Committee member) / McNeish, Daniel (Committee member) / Dibble, Leland (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2021