List of works
Abstract
Published 10/2025
Medicine and science in sports and exercise, 56, 10S, 429
ACSM Annual Meeting, 2025
Conference poster abstract
Abstract
Effects of Endurance Exercise on Non-alcoholic Fatty Liver Disease in Mouse
Published 10/2025
Medicine and science in sports and exercise, 57, 10 Supplement, 226
ACSM Annual Meeting, 2025
Conference poster abstract
Abstract
Published 10/2025
Medicine and science in sports and exercise, 57, 10 Supplement, 116
ACSM Annual Meeting, 2025
Conference poster abstract
Abstract
Published 10/2025
Medicine and science in sports and exercise, 57, 10 Supplement, 604
ACSM Annual Meeting, 2025
Conference poster abstract
Abstract
Inter-rater agreement on ECG interpretation among a cardiologist, an expert reader
Published 02/01/2025
Journal of clinical exercise physiology, 14, s1, 2 - 2
Abstract
International Criteria EKG Interpretation Comparison Study
Published 10/2024
Medicine and science in sports and exercise, 56, 10 Supplemental, 884
Conference poster abstract
Abstract
Synergistic Effects Of L-dopa And Treadmill Exercise In A Mouse Model Of Parkinson’s Disease
Published 10/2024
Medicine and science in sports and exercise, 56, 10 Supplemental, 369
Conference poster abstract
Abstract
Published 10/2024
Medicine and science in sports and exercise, 56, 10 Supplemental, 242
Conference poster abstract
Journal article
ECG Characteristics of Young High School Athletes in Northwest Florida
Published 06/01/2024
Journal of clinical exercise physiology, 13, 2, 44 - 51
Background: Sudden cardiac death in young athletes is a rare and tragic occurrence. A pre-participation physical examination (PPE) is widely used to identify athletes who might be at risk of sudden cardiac death. High school athletes in Escambia, Okaloosa, Santa Rosa, and Walton counties in Florida undergo annual sports physicals through a local sports medicine outreach program. A resting electrocardiogram (ECG) was implemented during the 2022 PPE. The aim of this study was to document the efficacy of implementing ECGs and to highlight the cardiac abnormalities identified in young athletes as part of a 1-d PPE.
Methods: In total, 1,357 high school athletes (males = 879 and females = 478; age, 15.1 ± 1.3 years) completed a resting 12-lead ECG. These were interpreted by cardiologists using the International Criteria, with abnormal results being further investigated before final sports clearance. Descriptive statistics regarding ECG findings were analyzed.
Results: Twenty-three ECGs (1.7%) were classified as “abnormal” and were referred for further testing. Of these, 14 athletes were cleared to participate in sports, and 6 declined further evaluation. Three athletes, all males, were not cleared for sports participation. Of these, 2 athletes presented with Wolf-Parkinson-White syndrome (0.15%), and 1 athlete (0.10%) presented with dilated cardiomyopathy.
Conclusion: Adding ECG screening as part of a single-day PPE can be used as a tool in identifying cardiac abnormalities among young athletes. To our knowledge, this is the highest number of athletes screened during a PPE in 1 d nationwide.
Journal article
Published 03/2024
Journal of sport rehabilitation, 33, 3, 215 - 219
Context : Latency is a reliable temporal metric used to evaluate sensorimotor integration of the fibularis longus (FL) and fibularis brevis (FB) during lateral ankle sprain perturbations. Currently, no clinical recommendations exist to select appropriate thresholds to evaluate the closed-loop reflex response of the lateral ankle musculature. The purpose of this study was to assess threshold value on latency of the FL and FB during an unanticipated inversion perturbation that simulates the mechanism of a lateral ankle sprain.
Design : Descriptive laboratory study.
Methods : Twenty healthy adults with no history of lateral ankle sprain injury completed an unanticipated single-leg drop landing onto a 25° laterally inclined force platform from a height of 30 cm. Surface electromyography recorded muscle activity data from the FL and FB during the inversion perturbation. Latency was identified at points where muscle activity exceeded 2, 5, and 10 SD above the average muscle activity 200 milliseconds prior to foot contact, and compared across threshold value using a 1-way analysis of variance ( P < .05).
Results : The 2 SD threshold was significantly shorter than both 5 SD and 10 SD thresholds for the FL ( P < .01) and FB ( P < .01). Likewise, the 5 SD threshold was significantly shorter than the 10 SD thresholds for FL ( P = .004) and FB ( P = .003).
Conclusions : More sensitive thresholds results in a shorter closed-loop reflexive response compared to the more rigorous thresholds. We recommend that selection of the appropriate threshold to identify latency of the lateral ankle musculature should be based on the device used to simulate a lateral ankle sprain and the ankle inversion velocity produced during the ankle inversion perturbation.