Life expectancy and quality have a grave potential to decline due to increased chronic diseases such as sarcopenia, metabolic syndrome, diabetes, hypertension, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, cancer, cardiovascular disease, arthritis, and cognitive dysfunction. Furthermore, society has been impacted by constantly accruing health and social care costs. Managing symptoms and improving overall chronic conditions through lifestyle modifications have been recognized as the first line for being safe and cost-effective. However, we do not have sufficient scientific evidence of most chronic disease pathophysiology, and we currently cannot provide lifestyle prescriptions appropriate for each patient in most chronic diseases.
This Research Topic focuses on how lifestyle modification such as physical activity and exercise, dietary behavior and nutrition, sleep quality, cognitive behavioral therapy, and other relatable factors can provide a non-invasive role for various chronic disease prevention and treatment and delivering a safe and effective prescription for physicians, exercise specialists, dietitian, occupational therapist, and physiotherapists.
We would appreciate gathering papers, reviews, and clinical data regarding alternative therapies’ efficacy in various medical and physiological fields for chronic disease prevention and treatment according to the topics below:
• Synergistic and independent effects of exercise, nutrition and cognitive behavior therapies for morphological improvement, stabilized sociocultural amelioration, therapeutic measures for both mental and physical stress;
• The impact of exercise and nutritional application on physiological changes in terms of hormonal, chronic inflammation and oxidative stress, electroencephalographic, metabolic, as well as proteomic and transcriptional changes;
• Verification of personalized prescription on lifestyle changes;
• Exercise-induced liver-muscle cross-talk and mitochondrial adaptations;
• The impact of various factors of physical changes from daily regimen for rehabilitation;
• The benefits of lifestyle alterations on behavior-induced sleep-wake dysregulation.
Other formats such as methodological papers, position papers, brief reports, and commentaries are welcome as well.
Life expectancy and quality have a grave potential to decline due to increased chronic diseases such as sarcopenia, metabolic syndrome, diabetes, hypertension, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, cancer, cardiovascular disease, arthritis, and cognitive dysfunction. Furthermore, society has been impacted by constantly accruing health and social care costs. Managing symptoms and improving overall chronic conditions through lifestyle modifications have been recognized as the first line for being safe and cost-effective. However, we do not have sufficient scientific evidence of most chronic disease pathophysiology, and we currently cannot provide lifestyle prescriptions appropriate for each patient in most chronic diseases.
This Research Topic focuses on how lifestyle modification such as physical activity and exercise, dietary behavior and nutrition, sleep quality, cognitive behavioral therapy, and other relatable factors can provide a non-invasive role for various chronic disease prevention and treatment and delivering a safe and effective prescription for physicians, exercise specialists, dietitian, occupational therapist, and physiotherapists.
We would appreciate gathering papers, reviews, and clinical data regarding alternative therapies’ efficacy in various medical and physiological fields for chronic disease prevention and treatment according to the topics below:
• Synergistic and independent effects of exercise, nutrition and cognitive behavior therapies for morphological improvement, stabilized sociocultural amelioration, therapeutic measures for both mental and physical stress;
• The impact of exercise and nutritional application on physiological changes in terms of hormonal, chronic inflammation and oxidative stress, electroencephalographic, metabolic, as well as proteomic and transcriptional changes;
• Verification of personalized prescription on lifestyle changes;
• Exercise-induced liver-muscle cross-talk and mitochondrial adaptations;
• The impact of various factors of physical changes from daily regimen for rehabilitation;
• The benefits of lifestyle alterations on behavior-induced sleep-wake dysregulation.
Other formats such as methodological papers, position papers, brief reports, and commentaries are welcome as well.