Filip Larsen

Filip Larsen
Swedish School of Sport and Health Sciences | GIH · Åstrand Laboratory of Work Physiology

PhD medical science

About

30
Publications
9,898
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3,626
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Introduction

Publications

Publications (30)
Article
Full-text available
The repair, remodeling, and regeneration of myofibers are dependent on satellite cells (SCs), although, the distribution of SCs in different fiber types of human muscle remains inconclusive. There is also a paucity of research comparing muscle fiber characteristics in a sex-specific manner. Therefore, the aim of this study was to investigate fiber...
Article
We recently reported the circulatory and muscle oxidative capacities of the arm after prolonged low-intensity skiing in the arctic (Boushel et al., 2014). In the present study, leg VO2 was measured by the Fick method during leg cycling while muscle mitochondrial capacity was examined on a biopsy of the vastus lateralis in healthy volunteers (7 male...
Article
Full-text available
Intense exercise training is a powerful stimulus that activates mitochondrial biogenesis pathways and thus increases mitochondrial density and oxidative capacity. Moderate levels of reactive oxygen species (ROS) during exercise are considered vital in the adaptive response, but high ROS production is a serious threat to cellular homeostasis. Althou...
Article
Full-text available
Inorganic nitrate (NO3(-)) is a precursor of nitric oxide (NO) in the body and a large number of short-term studies with dietary nitrate supplementation in animals and humans show beneficial effects on cardiovascular health, exercise efficiency, host defense and ischemia reperfusion injury. In contrast, there is a long withstanding concern regardin...
Article
Full-text available
Mitochondrial potassium channels have been implicated in myocardial protection mediated through pre-/postconditioning. Compounds that open the Ca2+- and voltage-activated potassium channel of big-conductance (BK) have a pre-conditioning-like effect on survival of cardiomyocytes after ischemia/reperfusion injury. Recently, mitochondrial BK channels...
Article
The maximum power principle dictates that open biological systems tend to self-organize to a level of efficiency that allows maximal power production. Applying this principle to cellular energetics and whole-body physiology would suggest that for every metabolic challenge, an optimal efficiency exists that maximizes power production. On exposure to...
Article
Full-text available
Nitrate, which is an inorganic anion abundant in vegetables, increases the efficiency of isolated human mitochondria. Such an effect might be reflected in changes in the resting metabolic rate (RMR) and formation of reactive oxygen species. The bioactivation of nitrate involves its active accumulation in saliva followed by a sequential reduction to...
Article
The integration of the rate-of-living and oxidative damage theory of aging predicts that lifespan extension is linked to low energy metabolism, low reactive oxygen species production rates and a slow aging rate. Recent studies show that inorganic nitrate, an inorganic anion abundant in vegetables, can reduce oxygen consumption during physical exerc...
Article
Inorganic nitrate has been shown to reduce oxygen cost during exercise. Since the nitrate-nitrite-NO pathway is facilitated during hypoxia, we investigated the effects of dietary nitrate on oxygen consumption and cardiovascular responses during apnea. These variables were measured in two randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover proto...
Article
Endogenous nitric oxide (NO) generated from l-arginine by NO synthase regulates mitochondrial function by binding to cytochrome c oxidase in competition with oxygen. This interaction can elicit a variety of intracellular signaling events of both physiological and pathophysiological significance. Recent lines of research demonstrate that inorganic n...
Article
Reactive nitrogen and oxygen species have been proposed to be involved in control of insulin release from the pancreatic β cell. Recent evidence suggests that the supposedly inert anions nitrate and nitrite are metabolized in blood and tissues to form nitric oxide (NO) and other bioactive nitrogen oxides. Here we present evidence for a novel stimul...
Article
to the editor: Recent studies show that dietary supplementation with inorganic nitrate (NO3−) reduces whole body oxygen cost during physical exercise, an effect that might be used by endurance athletes in an attempt to increase stamina ([1][1]–[3][2], [6][3], [7][4], [9][5]–[11][6]). In the
Article
Long-term cardiorespiratory fitness (CRF) and the development of type 2 diabetes mellitus are inversely correlated. Here, we examined the relationships between peak oxygen uptake (VO(2)peak), on the one hand, and glucose infusion rate at rest (GIR(rest)) and during exercise (GIR(exercise)), as well as insulin secretion (both the early and late phas...
Article
The basal metabolic rate (BMR) is referred to as the minimal rate of metabolism required to support basic body functions. It is well known that individual BMR varies greatly, even when correcting for body weight, fat content, and thyroid hormone levels, but the mechanistic determinants of this phenomenon remain unknown. Here, we show in humans that...
Article
Full-text available
The aim of the study was to find a simple intravenous glucose tolerance test (IVGTT) that can be used to estimate insulin sensitivity. In 20 healthy volunteers aged between 18 and 51 years (mean, 28) comparisons were made between kinetic parameters derived from a 12-sample, 75-min IVGTT and the M(bw) (glucose uptake) obtained during a hyperinsuline...
Article
Nitrate, an inorganic anion abundant in vegetables, is converted in vivo to bioactive nitrogen oxides including NO. We recently demonstrated that dietary nitrate reduces oxygen cost during physical exercise, but the mechanism remains unknown. In a double-blind crossover trial we studied the effects of a dietary intervention with inorganic nitrate o...
Article
The present study investigates the adaptation of the central circulation to ultraendurance exercise, including the relative contributions of changes in stroke volume (SV) and arteriovenous oxygen difference to the increased oxygen pulse (VO2/HR). We evaluated subjects undergoing 12 h of mixed exercise at controlled intensity (n=8) and a 53-h advent...
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Article
Full-text available
Inorganic nitrate from dietary and endogenous sources is emerging as a substrate for in vivo generation of nitric oxide (NO) and other reactive nitrogen oxides. Dietary amounts of nitrate clearly have robust NO-like effects in humans, including blood pressure reduction, inhibition of platelet aggregation, and vasoprotective activity. In animal mode...
Article
The metabolic syndrome is a clustering of risk factors of metabolic origin that increase the risk for cardiovascular disease and type 2 diabetes. A proposed central event in metabolic syndrome is a decrease in the amount of bioavailable nitric oxide (NO) from endothelial NO synthase (eNOS). Recently, an alternative pathway for NO formation in mamma...
Article
The anion nitrate-abundant in our diet-has recently emerged as a major pool of nitric oxide (NO) synthase-independent NO production. Nitrate is reduced stepwise in vivo to nitrite and then NO and possibly other bioactive nitrogen oxides. This reductive pathway is enhanced during low oxygen tension and acidosis. A recent study shows a reduction in o...
Article
Nitric oxide (NO), synthesized from l-arginine by NO synthases, plays a role in adaptation to physical exercise by modulating blood flow, muscular contraction and glucose uptake and in the control of cellular respiration. Recent studies show that NO can be formed in vivo also from the reduction of inorganic nitrate (NO(3) (-)) and nitrite (NO(2) (-...
Article
To the Editor: Nitric oxide, generated by nitric oxide synthase, is a key regulator of vascular integrity. This system is dysfunctional in many cardiovascular disorders, including hypertension. A f ...

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