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DOLA

Fat Bruno

Well-known member
Dominant Offensive Lunchline Attitude

Weights of Division III football linemen up 38 percent since 1956, Tufts researchers report

Public Release: 12-Jul-2016

The increase in size of offensive linemen emphasizes the need for post-football lifestyle changes to prevent long-term health complications

Tufts University, Health Sciences Campus

BOSTON (July 12, 2016)--Professional football players are heftier now than they were decades ago, but a new study from researchers at Tufts University School of Medicine shows that even players for less-prominent college football programs are getting bigger. The Tufts researchers report that the average weight of offensive linemen in a Division III collegiate football conference has increased nearly 38 percent since 1956, while the average male's weight increased only 12 percent during the same timeframe. These findings are published in the Journal of Athletic Training and highlight the need to modify athletes' post-football lifestyles in order to prevent long-term health problems.

"Increases in weight and body mass index (BMI) are associated with cholesterol disorders, diabetes, hypertension and cardiovascular diseases. The results of our study emphasize the importance of helping these players to develop a healthy post-football lifestyle in order to reduce their risks of serious long-term health complications," says senior author David J. Greenblatt, M.D., Louis Lasagna Professor in the Department of Integrative Physiology and Pathobiology at Tufts University School of Medicine and a member of the Pharmacology and Experimental Therapeutics graduate program faculty at the Sackler School of Graduate Biomedical Sciences at Tufts.

The researchers examined the football rosters of the 10 colleges and universities in the New England Small College Athletic Conference (NESCAC) from 1956 through 2014 in five-year intervals. Players were grouped by field position (quarterbacks, running backs, offensive linemen, etc.). Weight, height and BMI were recorded for each player from game programs and rosters available online. The data for the positional groups were then compared with data from a control group at corresponding time intervals, made up of males aged 20-29 from the general population.

For offensive linemen, the mean weight increased nearly 38 percent, while the control group experienced only a 12 percent increase. Overall changes in height for the offensive linemen increased only 3.8 percent. For players in skill positions, such as quarterbacks, wide receivers and kickers, the mean weight changes over time were similar to those in the control group.

The researchers also analyzed BMI, which takes into account both height and weight, used as an approximation of body fat. The average body mass index of NESCAC offensive linemen in 1956 was 26, while it was nearly 34 in 2014. By 2014 nearly one out of three NESCAC offensive linemen had a BMI over 35, while in 1956 there were no offensive linemen in the conference with a BMI over 35. A BMI over 25 is considered overweight, and over 30 is considered obese.

"Through selective recruiting, weight training and nutrition ('hyper-nutrition'), we end up with a population of large linemen," says Greenblatt. "The public health issue is that everybody involved with American football needs to develop concerted ways to assure the health of players when their football days are over. This includes making programs available to help players transition into post-football life with healthy habits. The same can also be said for several other collegiate sports. Coaches, trainers and nutritionists can all play an important role in the long-term health of their players."

According to the CDC's 2015 statistics, more than one-third of U.S. adults are obese, putting them at a higher risk for all causes of death and a number of chronic health conditions. These include high blood pressure, type 2 diabetes, heart disease, sleep apnea and osteoarthritis.

The NCAA organizes collegiate sports into three divisions. Division I represents the highest level of athletic competition in collegiate sports. Colleges and universities in Division II and III sponsor fewer sports and are typically smaller. The emphasis in Division III athletics is on maximizing the number and range of athletic opportunities available to students.

Previous studies which highlighted the increase in sizes of collegiate football players have focused primarily on athletes in Division I conferences. Little research has been done on the body-size trends among players in Division III football programs. The researchers note that further studies are needed to determine if athletes in other Division III conferences, along with those in the NESCAC, have experienced similar changes in size over the same period of time.

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First you post about head injuries and now this? Get that liberal BS out of here!!


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grizcountry420 said:
First you post about head injuries and now this? Get that liberal BS out of here!!


Posting scientific research does not make it liberal. It does appear that bruno has some sort of agenda. Not sure what it is yet.

If I were you, I would be thanking liberals. It certainly isn't the right that is encouraging your 420 lifestyle.
 
This study doesn't cover the average tailgate fan either. I bet my BMI increases 5-10% during the season just from all beverages at tailgating! Oh damn, they don't care about us....
 
grizatwork said:
grizcountry420 said:
First you post about head injuries and now this? Get that liberal BS out of here!!


Posting scientific research does not make it liberal. It does appear that bruno has some sort of agenda. Not sure what it is yet.

If I were you, I would be thanking liberals. It certainly isn't the right that is encouraging your 420 lifestyle.



Posting scientific research like concussions and being fat is very liberal. Now if he was posting some scientific research about sharks and dinosaurs i wouldn't have called him out..

And you would be surprised how many people from the right encourage a 420 lifestyle.
 
As night followeth day, so does this post follow(eth) the previous one ... which is why I'm posting from the gym, and looking painfully forward to my lunch time salad.


As body mass index increases, so does spread of multiple myeloma

In a new study published in Cancer Letters, American University researchers show how, as body mass index increases, so does the growth and spread of the blood cancer multiple myeloma, which accounts for about 10 percent of all blood cancers in patients.

"Once a person with cancer is out of the normal weight category, their BMI is contributing to multiple myeloma growth and progression," said Katie DeCicco-Skinner, associate professor of biology at American University and lead study author.

DeCicco-Skinner and her colleagues examined the BMI of normal, overweight, obese and morbidly obese patients, and the effects on multiple myeloma. Little research into multiple myeloma examines varying patient weight to see how cells encourage cancer growth. Even fewer studies examine cancer and the morbidly obese - a fourth weight category DeCicco-Skinner said was important to study, as more overweight individuals today have the condition.

Obesity is believed to be a risk factor for many cancers, and each 5 kg/m2 increase in BMI is associated with an increase of 10 percent in cancer-related deaths, studies show. In the multiple myeloma study, normal weight is defined as a BMI of no more than 25 kg/m2, and morbidly obese is in the range of 35 to 40 kg/m2.

Cultivating stem cells

The researchers obtained stem cells from the discarded fat of liposuction patients who underwent elective surgery. They turned them into fat cells and cultured the fat cells with multiple myeloma. In bone marrow, where multiple myeloma often takes root, fat cells play an important role in the proliferation, survival, progression and drug resistance of the cancer cells.

As a patient's BMI increases, fat cells communicate with multiple myeloma cells, researchers found. Fat cells grow larger, gain additional lipid and secrete proteins linked to cancer. The researchers also found a correlation between BMI and angiogenesis and adhesion, key indicators of progression.

"We know multiple myeloma cells will anchor into bone marrow, and fat cells in the bone marrow will support the growth and spread of the cancer. In our study, as BMI increased, we started seeing an increase in the ability of multiple myeloma cells to adhere, which causes the cancer to better anchor," DeCicco-Skinner explained. "With angiogenesis, cancer cells cannot exist without their own blood supply. We also found the amount of blood vessels that developed was directly proportional to a patient's BMI."

DeCicco-Skinner and her colleagues assumed cancer proliferation would benefit from higher-than-normal BMI because of the epidemiological link between obesity and cancer. But the relationship between multiple myeloma and the BMI of obese and morbidly obese patients was drastic.

"We found that fat cells from obese or morbidly obese patients secreted a high amount of inflammatory proteins, which contributed to tumor progression," DeCicco-Skinner said.

Implications for treatment

DeCicco-Skinner's research suggests a new approach for the treatment of multiple myeloma. Physicians may want to consider tailoring drugs based on a patient's BMI because a drug may not be as effective in obese or morbidly obese patients.

"Most people think if you develop multiple myeloma, you go to the doctor, find out what the most effective drug cocktail is and how it will affect you," DeCicco-Skinner said. "A patient may need to receive drugs to block inflammatory or other obesity-specific proteins, in addition to standard anti-cancer drugs they receive."

Whether investigating fat cells, immunotherapy or use of the CRISPR-Cas 9 gene-editing tool, which a federal panel recently approved for a select number of patients suffering from three types of cancers, including multiple myeloma, approaches beyond attacking cancer cells are needed in the fight against many cancers. With multiple myeloma, most patients live four to seven years from their date of diagnosis, and most become resistant to chemotherapy drugs over time.

"Obesity increasingly plays a role in cancer cases as the numbers of those who are obese rise. Improving our understanding of how fat cells and cancer cells communicate with each other, and how the communication changes during obesity, is critical," DeCicco-Skinner said.

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As for an agenda, well, these issues are of great personal concern to me ... and to the simpletons who say that providing information on the dangers of things which might reduce support for things dear to their shriveled, little hearts, I can only say that any vicarious thrills you sociopaths derive from keeping people ignorant about the sickness and poor health of the young kids who give you those thrills is truly sick.
 
Htowngriz said:
Louis Lasagna Professor in the Department of Integrative Physiology and Pathobiology at Tufts University

:lol: :lol:

I know that Professor Lasagna learned @ the feet of the great Reggie Parmigiano @ the same venerable institution. Solid nutritional information for sure.
 
Fat Bruno said:
As for an agenda, well, these issues are of great personal concern to me ... and to the simpletons who say that providing information on the dangers of things which might reduce support for things dear to their shriveled, little hearts, I can only say that any vicarious thrills you sociopaths derive from keeping people ignorant about the sickness and poor health of the young kids who give you those thrills is truly sick.
Your pompous verbosity reeks of krak.
 
All I can say is Fats came upon the E-griz board in a "big" way!

Not sayin he/she is bad but is very good on heavy stuff.
 
Omegagriz ... the last to know. A frightened trog in constant fear of losing the last of his brain dead dreams and selfish interests ... a degraded hominid who can't move with his betters, so spends all his time in panic and denial, trying to drag them back to his trog shit hole.
 
FatBloomberg75 a wannabe cyber bully that somehow found a thesaurus and is narcissisticly trying to show everyone his big, gigantic vocabulary to deflect from other deficiencies.

#verboseproseisnotyou
 
My inside source said you would be using it and not to tell anyone, you see I am not out to control anything like you two. I let free will work its magic.
 
Let's make it as simple as possible. Tell us in you own words, striving to grunt grammatically, how providing information is controlling people. Then, tell us why attempting to hide information, which you would like to see, is not controlling people. This is important since this root misapprehension on your part is at the base of most of your crude, embarrassing positions. Make a sincere attempt ... as a result, you will grow as a homo sapien even if you only partially succeed. I have only your interests at heart.
 
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