Glen Picard
Spaulding Rehabilitation Hospital
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Publication
Featured researches published by Glen Picard.
Pm&r | 2011
J. Andrew Taylor; Glen Picard; Jeffrey J. Widrick
To determine the magnitude and range of increases in peak aerobic capacity with hybrid–functional electrical stimulation (FES) rowing versus arms‐only rowing in persons with spinal cord injury.
Hypertension | 2009
Gaëlle Deley; Glen Picard; J. Andrew Taylor
Maintained cardiac vagal function is critical to cardiovascular health in human aging. Aerobic exercise training has been considered an attractive intervention to increase cardiovagal baroreflex function; however, the data are equivocal. Moreover, if regular exercise does reverse the age-related decline in cardiovagal baroreflex function, it is unknown how this might be achieved. Therefore, we assessed the effects of a 6-month aerobic training program on baroreflex gain and its mechanical and neural components in older individuals (5 women and 7 men, aged 55 to 71 years). We assessed baroreflex function using pharmacological pressure changes (bolus nitroprusside followed by bolus phenylephrine) and estimated the integrated gain (&Dgr;R-R interval/&Dgr; systolic blood pressure) and mechanical (&Dgr; diameter/&Dgr; pressure) and neural (&Dgr;R-R interval/&Dgr; diameter) components via measurements of carotid artery diameter in previously sedentary older individuals before and after 6 months of aerobic training. There was a significant 26% increase in baroreflex gain that was directly related to the amount of exercise performed and that was derived mainly from an increase in the neural component of the arterial baroreflex (P<0.05). We did find changes in the mechanical component, but unlike integrated gain and the neural component, these were not related to the magnitude of the exercise stimulus. These results suggest that exercise training can have a powerful effect on cardiovagal baroreflex function, but a sufficient stimulus is necessary to produce the effect. Moreover, adaptations in the afferent-efferent baroreflex control of cardiac vagal outflow may be crucial for the improvement in arterial baroreflex function in older humans.
Autonomic Neuroscience: Basic and Clinical | 2008
Kichang Lee; Glen Picard; Stacy D. Beske; Gyu-Sam Hwang; J. Andrew Taylor
Previous work indicates compromised cardiac vagal control plays a prominent role in reducing arterial baroreflex gain with age, however older fit individuals display cardiovagal baroreflex responses similar to young individuals. The purpose of this study was to test the hypothesis that chronic aerobic exercise mitigates against age-related declines in cardiac parasympathetic receptor function. In forty-four young and old (fit and unfit) individuals, we used the parasympathomimetic responses to low doses of atropine to probe cardiac cholinergic receptor responses. Data were collected before and after eight doses of atropine sulfate from 0.4 to 7.2 microg/kg. Chronotropic responses were assessed from average RR intervals and heart rate variabilities were derived in time and frequency domains. All subjects exhibited bradycardia with at least one dose of atropine and peak bradycardia occurred at a similar dose in each group. However, changes in heart rate variability did not consistently track the chronotropic responses within subjects (r-square from 0.90 down to 0). As expected, basal RR interval was longer in the fit groups and was unaffected by age. However, the degree of RR interval lengthening with parasympathomimetic atropine was unaffected by physical fitness and was significantly less in all older subjects. These data indicate there are certain prepotent age-related declines in the cardiac parasympathetic system that cannot be prevented by regular physical activity.
Pm&r | 2009
Glen Picard; Can Ozan Tan; Ross Zafonte; J. Andrew Taylor
To describe the relationship between vagally mediated bradycardia and heart rate variability indices in young and older healthy individuals.
Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation | 2014
J. Andrew Taylor; Glen Picard; Aidan Porter; Leslie R. Morse; Meghan F. Pronovost; Gaëlle Deley
OBJECTIVE To test the hypothesis that hybrid functional electrical stimulation (FES) row training would improve aerobic capacity but that it would remain strongly linked to level of spinal cord lesion because of limited maximal ventilation. DESIGN Longitudinal before-after trial of 6 months of FES row training. SETTING Exercise for persons with disabilities program in a hospitaL. PARTICIPANTS Volunteers (N=14; age range, 21-63y) with complete spinal cord injury (SCI) (T3-11) who are >2 years postinjury. INTERVENTION Six months of FES row training preceded by a variable period of FES strength training. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Peak aerobic capacity and peak exercise ventilation before and after 6 months of FES row training. RESULTS FES row training significantly increased peak aerobic capacity and peak minute ventilation (both P<.05). Prior to FES row training, there was a close relation between level of SCI and peak aerobic capacity (adjusted R(2)=.40, P=.009) that was markedly reduced after FES row training (adjusted R(2)=.15, P=.10). In contrast, the relation between level of injury and peak minute ventilation was comparable before and after FES row training (adjusted R(2)=.38 vs .32, both P<.05). CONCLUSIONS The increased aerobic capacity reflects more than increased ventilation; FES row training effectively circumvents the effect of SCI on peak aerobic capacity by engaging more muscle mass for training, independent of the level of injury.
Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2016
Shuang Qiu; Saeed Alzhab; Glen Picard; J. Andrew Taylor
PURPOSE In the able-bodied, exercise training results in increased ventilatory capacity to meet increased aerobic demands of trained skeletal muscle. However, after spinal cord injury (SCI), peak ventilation can be limited by pulmonary muscle denervation. In fact, peak ventilation may restrict aerobic capacity in direct relation to injury level. Hybrid functional electrical stimulation (FES) exercise training results in increased aerobic capacity and dissociation between aerobic capacity and injury level in those with injuries at T3 and below. However, injuries above T3 have the greatest pulmonary denervation, and ventilatory capacity may restrict the increase in aerobic capacity with hybrid FES training. METHODS We assessed relationships among injury level, peak ventilation, and peak aerobic capacity and calculated oxygen uptake efficiency slope during hybrid FES exercise in 12 individuals (1 female) with SCI at level T2 to C4 (injury duration = 0.33-33 yr, age = 20-60 yr), before and after 6 months of FES-row training (FES-RT). RESULTS Training increased peak aerobic capacity by 12% (P = 0.02) with only a modest increase in peak ventilation (7 of 12 subjects, P = 0.09). Both before and after training, injury level was directly related to peak ventilation (R = 0.48 and 0.43) and peak aerobic capacity (R = 0.70 and 0.55). Before training, the relationship of peak aerobic capacity to peak ventilation was strong (R = 0.62), however, after training, this relationship became almost completely linearized (R = 0.84). In addition, oxygen uptake efficiency slope increased by 11% (P < 0.05) after FES-RT. CONCLUSION Despite the ability to increase exercise capacity via hybrid FES exercise, the inability to increase peak ventilation beyond limits set by SCI level in those with high-level injuries (above T3) appears to restrict aerobic capacity.
Journal of Biomechanics | 2017
Adina E. Draghici; Glen Picard; J. Andrew Taylor; Sandra J. Shefelbine
Hybrid functional electrical stimulation (FES) rowing has positive effects on cardiovascular fitness, producing significantly greater aerobic power than either upper body or FES exercise alone. However, there is minimal information on the kinematics, kinetics, and mechanical efficiency of FES-rowing in the spinal cord injured (SCI) population. This study examined the biomechanics of FES-rowing to determine how motions, forces, and aerobic demand change with increasing intensity. Six individuals with SCI and six able-bodied subjects performed a progressive aerobic capacity rowing test. Differences in kinematics (motion profiles), kinetics (forces produced by the feet and arms), external mechanical work, and mechanical efficiency (work produced/volume of oxygen consumed) were compared in able-bodied rowing vs. SCI FES-rowing at three comparable subpeak workloads. With increasing exercise intensity (measured as wattage), able-bodied rowing increased stroke rate by decreasing recovery time, while FES-rowing maintained a constant stroke rate, with no change in drive or recovery times. While able-bodied rowers increased leg and arm forces with increasing intensity, FES-rowers used only their arms to achieve a higher intensity with a constant and relatively low contribution of the legs. Oxygen consumption increased in both groups, but more so in able-bodied rowers, resulting in able-bodied rowers having twice the mechanical efficiency of FES-rowers. Our results suggest that despite its ability to allow for whole body exercise, the total force output achievable with FES-rowing results in only modest loading of the legs that affects overall rowing performance and that may limit forces applied to bone.
American Journal of Physical Medicine & Rehabilitation | 2018
Rebecca F. Shaffer; Glen Picard; J. Andrew Taylor
2018 Design of Medical Devices Conference | 2018
Jinsoo Kim; Ciaran O’Neill; Kavya Pathak; Sai Shanthanand Rajagopal; Martina Moyne; Glen Picard; J. Andrew Taylor; Conor J. Walsh
The FASEB Journal | 2015
Adina E. Draghici; Sandra J. Shefelbine; J. Andrew Taylor; Glen Picard