Background In recent years, many studies have associated sedentary behavior in front of screens with health problems in infants, children, and adolescents. Yet options for exergaming—playing video games that require rigorous physical exercise—seem to fall short of the physical activity levels recommended by the World Health Organization. Objective The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of a fully immersive virtual reality (VR)-based training system on cardiovascular and muscular parameters of young adults. Methods A cross-sectional experiment design was used to analyze muscle activity (surface electromyography), heart rate, perceived exertion (RPE), cybersickness symptoms, perceived workload, and physical activity enjoyment (PACES) in 33 participants performing two 5-minute flights on a new training device. Results Participants’ performance of the planking position required to play the game resulted in moderate aerobic intensity (108 [SD 18.69] bpm). Due to the mainly isometric contraction of the dorsal muscle chain (with a mean activation between 20.6% [SD 10.57] and 26.7% [SD 17.39] maximum voluntary isometric contraction), participants described the exercise as a moderate to vigorous activity (RPE 14.6 [SD 1.82]). The majority reported that they enjoyed the exercise (PACES 3.74 [SD 0.16]). However, six participants had to drop out because of cybersickness symptoms and two because of muscle pain due to prior injuries. Conclusions Our findings suggest that fully immersive VR training systems can contribute to muscle-strengthening activities for healthy users. However, the dropout rate highlights the need for technological improvements in both software and hardware. In prevention and therapy, movement quality is a fundamental part of providing effective resistance training that benefits health. Exergaming on a regular basis has the potential to develop strong muscles and a healthy back. It is essential that future VR-based training systems take into account the recommendations of sport and exercise science.
Emotional body-distant gestures are a prominent feature of winning athletes. Because negative emotions have been associated to increased self-touch behaviour, we investigated the hypothesis that athletes change from a more body-distant nonverbal hand movement behaviour when winning to a body-focused behaviour when losing. Nonverbal hand movements of professional right-handed tennis athletes were videotaped during competition and analyzed by certified raters using the NEUROpsychological GESture(NEUROGES)System. The results showed that losing athletes increase their irregular, on body, and phasic on body hand movements, particularly with the left hand. Emotion / attitude rise gestures with the right hand characterised winning athletes. The data suggest that the nonverbal hand movements of athletes serve different neuropsychological functions. Winners nonverbally express their positive feelings by body-distant gestures but change towards their own body to regulate stress when losing.
Estrogen is known to produce changes in cardiac electrophysiology specifically in premenopausal women, increasing the risk of arrhythmias. We report a case of Torsades de Pointes (TdP) in a young premenopausal female. A 25-year-old female with a history of anxiety presented to the emergency room (ED) with several days of vomiting. While in the ED, she had an unwitnessed syncopal event, and was found to be in pulseless ventricular fibrillation (V-Fib) . She required one defibrillation to obtain return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC). Initial work up showed calcium 7.6 mg/dl, phosphorous 1.1 mg/dl, magnesium 2.4 mg/dl, potassium 4.0 mg/dl. Remainder of electrolytes were normal. Toxicology screen was positive for cannabinoids. Post ROSC EKG showed sinus tachycardia at a rate of 103bpm with a prolonged QTc of 531ms. Patient was not on any medications outpatient. On further discussion, patient reported no prior history of syncopal episodes, palpitations, and denied any family history of sudden cardiac death. She did report she was presently on her menses. Shortly after admission, she had recurrent polymorphic ventricular tachycardia which degenerated to TdP. She was loaded with magnesium. Echocardiogram showed an ejection fraction (EF) of 35-39% and global hypokinesis. Diagnostic left heart catheterization was performed revealing clean coronaries. Cardiac MRI revealed EF of 43% without any late gadolinium enhancement. Her QTc remained prolonged even with electrolyte normalization. She underwent successful ICD placement and remained event free during the remainder of the hospital course. She will undergo genetic work up for long QT syndrome. Female sex hormones, specifically estrogen, have been described in literature as pro-arrhythmic given its effects on QT prolongation and ion gated channels. Prior cases of menstruation dependent arrhythmias have speculated that the abrupt reduction in estradiol prior to menstruation is associated with increased cyclic adenosine monophosphate dependent arrhythmogenicity. This case highlights the multifactorial etiology of sudden V-Fib arrest in a young female, and the importance of understanding the role that sex hormones play in the underlying pathogenesis.
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