15 results on '"Peeters, Maarten"'
Search Results
2. Genetic and Environmental Causes of Tracking in Explosive Strength during Adolescence
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Peeters, Maarten W., Thomis, Martine A., Maes, Hermine H. M., Loos, Ruth J. F., Claessens, Albrecht L., Vlietinck, Robert, and Beunen, Gaston P.
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- 2005
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3. Timing of Adolescent Somatic Maturity and Midlife Muscle Function: A 34-yr Follow-Up
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BEUNEN, GASTON P., PEETERS, MAARTEN W., MATTON, LYNN, CLAESSENS, ALBRECHT L., THOMIS, MARTINE A., and LEFEVRE, JOHAN A.
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- 2009
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4. Growth in Peak Aerobic Power during Adolescence
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GEITHNER, CHRISTINA A., THOMIS, MARTINE A., EYNDE, BAVO VANDEN, MAES, HERMINE H. M., LOOS, RUTH J. F., PEETERS, MAARTEN, CLAESSENS, ALBRECHT L. M., VLIETINCK, ROBERT, MALINA, ROBERT M., and BEUNEN, GASTON P.
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- 2004
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5. Genetics of Strength and Power Characteristics in Children and Adolescents.
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Beunen, Gaston, Thomis, Martine, Peeters, Maarten, Maes, Hermine H., Claessens, Albrecht L., and Vlietinck, Robert
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CHILDREN'S health ,ADOLESCENT health ,EXERCISE for children - Abstract
The aim of this study is to quantify the genetic and environmental variation in isometric and explosive strength (power) in children and adolescents, using structural equation models. Arm pull (static strength) and vertical jump (explosive strength, power) were measured in 105 twin pairs from the Leuven Longitudinal Twin Study. Boys and girls were tested at annual intervals between 10 and 16 years and at 18 years. Path models were fitted to the observed strength characteristics and a gender heterogeneity analysis was performed at each age level. A model including additive genetic and specific environmental factors (AE-model) allowing for a difference in total phenotypic variance or in genetic/environmental variance components in boys and girls best explains both strength characteristics at most age levels. The additive genetic contribution for isometric strength varies between a² = .44 and a² = .83, and for explosive strength between a² = .47 and a² = .92, except at 16 years in males. In conclusion there is good evidence that during the growth period both static and explosive strength are under moderate to moderately strong genetic influence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2003
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6. Caucasian children's fat mass: routine anthropometry v. air-displacement plethysmography.
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Michels, Nathalie, Huybrechts, Inge, Bammann, Karin, Lissner, Lauren, Moreno, Luis, Peeters, Maarten, Sioen, Isabelle, Vanaelst, Barbara, Vyncke, Krishna, and De Henauw, Stefaan
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ADIPOSE tissues ,AGE distribution ,BODY weight ,BIOELECTRIC impedance ,MATHEMATICS ,RESEARCH methodology ,PLETHYSMOGRAPHY ,REGRESSION analysis ,RESEARCH funding ,SEX distribution ,SKINFOLD thickness ,STATISTICS ,STATURE ,T-test (Statistics) ,U-statistics ,DATA analysis ,FIELD research ,INTER-observer reliability ,WAIST-hip ratio ,ARM circumference ,DATA analysis software ,WAIST circumference ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics - Abstract
The present paper will use fat mass percentage (FM%) obtained via BOD POD® air-displacement plethysmography (FMADP%) to examine the relative validity of (1) anthropometric measurements/indices and (2) of FM% assessed with equations (FMeq%) based on skinfold thickness and bioelectrical impedance (BIA). In 480 Belgian children (aged 5–11 years) weight, height, skinfold thickness (triceps and subscapular), body circumferences (mid-upper arm, waist and hip), foot-to-foot BIA (Tanita®) and FMADP% were measured. Anthropometric measurements and calculated indices were compared with FMADP%. Next, published equations were used to calculate FMeq% using impedance (equations of Tanita®, Tyrrell, Shaefer and Deurenberg) or skinfold thickness (equations of Slaughter, Goran, Dezenberg and Deurenberg). Both indices and equations performed better in girls than in boys. For both sexes, the sum of skinfold thicknesses resulted in the highest correlation with FMADP%, followed by triceps skinfold, arm fat area and subscapular skinfold. In general, comparing FMeq% with FMADP% indicated mostly an age and sex effect, and an increasing underestimation but less dispersion with increasing FM%. The Tanita® impedance equation and the Deurenberg skinfold equation performed the best, although none of the used equations were interchangeable with FMADP%. In conclusion, the sum of triceps and subscapular skinfold thickness is recommended as marker of FM% in the absence of specialised technologies. Nevertheless, the higher workload, cost and survey management of an immobile device like the BOD POD® remains justified. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
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- 2013
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7. The Left Hand Second to Fourth Digit Ratio (2D:4D) Is Not Related to Any Physical Fitness Component in Adolescent Girls.
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Peeters, Maarten W., Van Aken, Katrijn, and Claessens, Albrecht L.
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PHYSICAL fitness , *TEENAGE girls , *BIOMARKERS , *ANTHROPOMETRY , *MUSCULOSKELETAL system , *PHYSICAL therapy , *REGRESSION analysis , *MEDICAL statistics - Abstract
Introduction: The second to fourth-digit-ratio (2D:4D), a putative marker of prenatal androgen action and a sexually dimorphic trait, has been suggested to be related with fitness and sports performance, although results are not univocal. Most studies however focus on a single aspect of physical fitness or one sports discipline. Methods: In this study the 2D:4D ratio of 178 adolescent girls (age 13,5–18 y) was measured on X-rays of the left hand. The relation between 2D:4D digit ratio and multiple aspects of physical fitness (balance, speed of limb movement, flexibility, explosive strength, static strength, trunk strength, functional strength, running speed/agility, and endurance) was studied by correlation analyses and stepwise multiple regression. For comparison the relation between these physical fitness components and a selected number of objectively measured anthropometric traits (stature, mass, BMI, somatotype components and the Bayer & Bailey androgyny index) are presented alongside the results of 2D:4D digit ratio. Results: Left hand 2D:4D digit ratio (0.925±0.019) was not significantly correlated with any of the physical fitness components nor any of the anthropometric variables included in the present study. 2D:4D did not enter the multiple stepwise regression for any of the physical fitness components in which other anthropometric traits explained between 9,2% (flexibility) and 33,9% (static strength) of variance. Conclusion: Unlike other anthropometric traits the 2D:4D digit ratio does not seem to be related to any physical fitness component in adolescent girls and therefore most likely should not be considered in talent detection programs for sporting ability in girls. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2013
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8. The Left Hand Second to Fourth Digit Ratio (2D:4D) Does Not Discriminate World-Class Female Gymnasts from Age Matched Sedentary Girls.
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Peeters, Maarten W. and Claessens, Albrecht L.
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ANDROGENS , *GYMNASTS , *CHAMPIONSHIPS , *CRASH test dummies , *ANDROGYNY (Psychology) , *SEDENTARY women - Abstract
Introduction: The second to fourth-digit-ratio (2D:4D), a putative marker of prenatal androgen action and a sexually dimorphic trait, has been suggested to be related with sports performance, although results are not univocal. If this relation exists, it is most likely to be detected by comparing extreme groups on the continuum of sports performance. Methods: In this study the 2D:4D ratio of world-class elite female artistic gymnasts (n = 129), competing at the 1987 Rotterdam World-Championships was compared to the 2D:4D ratio of sedentary age-matched sedentary girls (n = 129), alongside with other anthropometric characteristics including other sexually dimorphic traits such as an androgyny index (Bayer & Bayley) and Heath-Carter somatotype components (endomorphy, mesomorphy, ectomorphy) using AN(C)OVA. 2D:4D was measured on X-rays of the left hand. Results: Left hand 2D:4D digit ratio in world class elite female gymnasts (0.92160.020) did not differ significantly from 2D:4D in age-matched sedentary girls (0.924 ±0.018), either with or without inclusion of potentially confounding covariates such as skeletal age, height, weight, somatotype components or androgyny index. Height (161.9 ±6.4 cm vs 155.4 ±6.6 cm p<0.01), weight (53.9 ±7.6 kg vs 46.2 6.3 kg p,0.01), BMI (20.51 ±2.41 kg/m2 vs 19.05 ±1.56 kg/m2), skeletal age (15.2 ±1.1 y vs 14.5 ±1.2 y p.0.01), somatotype components (4.0/3.0/2.9 vs 1.7/3.7/3.2 for endomorphy (p<0.01), mesomorphy (p<0.01) and ectomorphy (p<0.05) respectively) all differed significantly between sedentary girls and elite gymnasts. As expressed by the androgyny index, gymnasts have, on average, broader shoulders relative to their hips, compared to the reference sample. Correlations between the 2D:4D ratio and chronological age, skeletal age, and the anthropometric characteristics are low and not significant. Conclusion: Although other anthropometric characteristics of sexual dimorphism were significantly different between the two samples, the present study cannot discriminate sedentary girls from world-class female gymnasts by means of the left hand 2D:4D ratio. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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9. Subject Positioning in the BOD POD® Only Marginally Affects Measurement of Body Volume and Estimation of Percent Body Fat in Young Adult Men.
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Peeters, Maarten W.
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PLETHYSMOGRAPHY , *BLOOD circulation , *YOUNG adults , *RESPIRATORY organs , *HUMAN body composition , *CARDIOPULMONARY system - Abstract
Introduction: The aim of the study was to evaluate whether subject positioning would affect the measurement of raw body volume, thoracic gas volume, corrected body volume and the resulting percent body fat as assessed by air displacement plethysmography (ADP). Methods: Twenty-five young adult men (20.7±1.1y, BMI = 22.5±1.4 kg/m²) were measured using the BOD PODH system using a measured thoracic gas volume sitting in a 'forward bent' position and sitting up in a straight position in random order. Results: Raw body volume was 58±124 ml (p<0.05) higher in the 'straight' position compared to the 'bent' position. The mean difference in measured thoracic gas volume (bent-straight =271±211 ml) was not statistically significant. Corrected body volume and percent body fat in the bent position consequently were on average 86±122 ml (p<0.05) and 0.5±0.7% (p<0.05) lower than in the straight position respectively. Conclusion: Although the differences reached statistical significance, absolute differences are rather small. Subject positioning should be viewed as a factor that may contribute to between-test variability and hence contribute to (in)precision in detecting small individual changes in body composition, rather than a potential source of systematic bias. It therefore may be advisable to pay attention to standardizing subject positioning when tracking small changes in PF are of interest.The cause of the differences is shown not to be related to changes in the volume of isothermal air in the lungs. It is hypothesized and calculated that the observed direction and magnitude of these differences may arise from the surface area artifact which does not take into account that a subject in the bent position exposes more skin to the air in the device therefore potentially creating a larger underestimation of the actual body volume due to the isothermal effect of air close to the skin. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2012
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10. Letter to the Editor-in-Chief.
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Peeters, Maarten W.
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LETTERS to the editor ,PLETHYSMOGRAPHY ,BODY density ,HUMAN body composition ,BIOELECTRIC impedance ,MALE athletes ,HUMAN research subjects - Published
- 2011
11. Comprehensive fine mapping of chr12q12-14 and follow-up replication identify activin receptor 1B (ACVR1B) as a muscle strength gene.
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Windelinckx, An, De Mars, Gunther, Huygens, Wim, Peeters, Maarten W., Vincent, Barbara, Wijmenga, Cisca, Lambrechts, Diether, Delecluse, Christophe, Roth, Stephen M., Metter, E. Jeffrey, Ferrucci, Luigi, Aerssens, Jeroen, Vlietinck, Robert, Beunen, Gaston P., and Thomis, Martine A.
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MUSCLE strength ,ACTIVIN ,TRANSFORMING growth factors ,GENETIC regulation ,PHYSICAL activity ,HUMAN genetic variation ,CAUCASIAN race ,HEALTH - Abstract
Muscle strength is important in functional activities of daily living and the prevention of common pathologies. We describe the two-staged fine mapping of a previously identified linkage peak for knee strength on chr12q12-14. First, 209 tagSNPs in/around 74 prioritized genes were genotyped in 500 Caucasian brothers from the Leuven Genes for Muscular Strength study (LGfMS). Combined linkage and family-based association analyses identified activin receptor 1B (ACVR1B) and inhibin β C (INHBC), part of the transforming growth factor β pathway regulating myostatin - a negative regulator of muscle mass - signaling, for follow-up. Second, 33 SNPs, selected in these genes based on their likelihood to functionally affect gene expression/function, were genotyped in an extended sample of 536 LGfMS siblings. Strong associations between ACVR1B genotypes and knee muscle strength (P-values up to 0.00002) were present. Of particular interest was the association with rs2854464, located in a putative miR-24-binding site, as miR-24 was implicated in the inhibition of skeletal muscle differentiation. Rs2854464 AA individuals were ∼2% stronger than G-allele carriers. The strength increasing effect of the A-allele was also observed in an independent replication sample (n=266) selected from the Baltimore Longitudinal Study of Aging and a Flemish Policy Research Centre Sport, Physical Activity and Health study. However, no genotype-related difference in ACVR1B mRNA expression in quadriceps muscle was observed. In conclusion, we applied a two-stage fine mapping approach, and are the first to identify and partially replicate genetic variants in the ACVR1B gene that account for genetic variation in human muscle strength. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2011
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12. Clustering of metabolic risk factors in young adults: Genes and environment
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Peeters, Maarten W., Thomis, Martine A., Loos, Ruth J.F., Derom, Catherine A., Fagard, Robert, Vlietinck, Robert F., and Beunen, Gaston P.
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METABOLIC disorders , *METABOLIC syndrome , *METABOLIC syndrome risk factors , *STATISTICAL correlation , *TWINS , *CAUCASIAN race , *YOUNG adults , *PHENOTYPES , *GENE therapy - Abstract
Abstract: Objective: Evidence of a genetic basis of metabolic risk factors (MRFs) is growing. Studies examining the genetic and environmental basis of the clustering of MRFs, grouped together in the metabolic syndrome (MetS), are however sparse. The aim of this study therefore was to study the heritabilities of the MRFs and the genetic and environmental correlations between the MRFs. Methods: Study participants were 768 Caucasian twins coming from 418 pairs (18–34 years). MRFs were those included in the National Cholesterol Education Program Adult Treatment Panel III definition of the MetS. Multivariate path analysis on the continuous MRFs of the MetS was implemented. Results: Heritabilities ranged between 47.0% and 80.2% (men) and 58.5% and 77.9% (women) for the individual MRFs. Evidence was found for overarching genetic (A) and environmental (E) sources of variance, both however loading mainly on waist circumference. Furthermore, the model included a ‘lipids’ and a ‘blood pressure’-factor both in part attributable to A and E. The majority of the variance however was MRF-specific. Conclusion: Based on our sample of young adults with a low prevalence of the MetS, it can be concluded that both genes and environment contribute significantly to the clustering of the MRFs although the majority of the variation is MRF-specific. Therefore, future QTL searches in young adults may want to focus on MRF-specific loci, rather than ‘cluster-phenotypes’ such as the MetS. [Copyright &y& Elsevier]
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- 2008
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13. Tactile Spatial Attention Enhances Gamma-Band Activity in Somatosensory Cortex and Reduces Low-Frequency Activity in Parieto-Occipital Areas.
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Bauer, Markus, Oostenveld, Robert, Peeters, Maarten, and Fries, Pascal
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NEURONS ,BRAIN ,CEREBRAL cortex ,OCCIPITAL lobe ,NERVOUS system - Abstract
We investigated the effects of spatial-selective attention on oscillatory neuronal dynamics in a tactile delayed-match-to-sample task. Whole-head magnetoencephalography was recorded in healthy subjects while dot patterns were presented to their index fingers using Braille stimulators. The subjects' task was to report the reoccurrence of an initially presented sample pattern in a series of up to eight test stimuli that were presented unpredictably to their right or left index finger. Attention was cued to one side (finger) at the beginning of each trial, and subjects performed the task at the attended side, ignoring the unattended side. After stimulation, high-frequency gamma-band activity (60-95 Hz) in presumed primary somatosensory cortex (S1) was enhanced, whereas alpha- and beta-band activity were suppressed in somatosensory and occipital areas and then rebounded. Interestingly, despite the absence of any visual stimulation, we also found time-locked activation of medial occipital, presumably visual, cortex. Most relevant, spatial tactile attention enhanced stimulus-induced gamma-band activity in brain regions consistent with contralateral S1 and deepened and prolonged the stimulus induced suppression of beta- and alpha-band activity, maximal in parieto-occipital cortex. Additionally, the beta rebound over contralateral sensorimotor areas was suppressed. We hypothesize that spatial-selective attention enhances the saliency of sensory representations by synchronizing neuronal responses in early somatosensory cortex and thereby enhancing their impact on downstream areas and facilitating interareal processing. Furthermore, processing of tactile patterns also seems to recruit visual cortex and this even more so for attended compared with unattended stimuli. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
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14. Genetic and environmental determination of tracking in static strength during adolescence.
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Peeters, Maarten W., Thomis, Martine A., Maes, Hermine H. M., Beunen, Gaston P., Loos, Ruth J. F., Claessens, Albrecht L., and Vlietinck, Robert
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ADOLESCENCE ,GENETICS ,TEENAGERS ,MUSCLE strength ,PHENOTYPES ,GENOTYPE-environment interaction - Abstract
The purpose of this study was to determine whether the observed phenotypic stability in static strength during adolescence, as measured by interage correlations in arm pull, is mainly caused by genetic and/or environmental factors. Subjects were from the Leuven Longitudinal Twin Study (n = 105 pairs, equally divided over 5 zygosity groups). Arm-pull data were aligned on age at peak height velocity to attenuate the temporal fluctuations in interage correlations caused by differences in timing of the adolescent growth spurt. Developmental genetic models were fitted using structural equation modeling. After the data were aligned on age at peak height velocity, the annual interage correlations conformed to a quasi-simplex structure over a 4-yr interval. The best-fitting models included additive genetic and unique environmental sources of variation. Additive genetic factors that already explained a significant amount of variation at previous measurement occasions explained 44.3 and 22.5% of the total variation at the last measurement occasion in boys and girls, respectively. Corresponding values for unique environmental sources of variance are 31.2 and 44.5%, respectively. In conclusion, the observed stability of static strength during adolescence is caused by both stable genetic influences and stable unique environmental influences in boys and girls. Additive genetic factors seem to be the most important source of stability in boys, whereas unique environmental factors appear to be more predominant in girls. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2005
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15. Determinants and Upper-Limit Heritabilities of Skeletal Muscle Mass and Strength.
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Huygens, Wim, Thomis, Martine A., Peeters, Maarten W., Vlietinck, Robert F., and Beunen, Gaston P.
- Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Journal of Applied Physiology is the property of Canadian Science Publishing and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2004
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