Yves Schutz
University of Lausanne
256 Papers
3.5K Citations
Yves Schutz is an academic researcher from University of Lausanne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Basal metabolic rate & Resting energy expenditure. The author has an hindex of 69, co-authored 255 publications. Previous affiliations of Yves Schutz include University Hospital of Lausanne.
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Papers
Energy expenditure by doubly labeled water: validation in humans and proposed calculation
TL;DR: To further validate the doubly labeled water method for measurement of CO2 production and energy expenditure in humans, it is compared with near-continuous respiratory gas exchange in nine healthy young adult males.
764
The use of uniaxial accelerometry for the assessment of physical-activity-related energy expenditure: a validation study against whole-body indirect calorimetry.
Hideaki Kumahara,Yves Schutz,Makoto Ayabe,Mayumi Yoshioka,Yutaka Yoshitake,Munehiro Shindo,Kojiro Ishii,Hiroaki Tanaka +7 more
TL;DR: Although TEE and PAEE were systematically underestimated during the 24 h period, the accelerometer assessed energy expenditure well during both the exercise period and the non-structured activities.
Metabolic equivalent: one size does not fit all.
TL;DR: The metabolic equivalent (MET) is a physiological concept that represents a simple procedure for expressing energy cost of physical activities as multiples of resting metabolic rate (RM) as discussed by the authors, which is a common physiological concept.
519
Management of obesity in adults: European clinical practice guidelines
Constantine Tsigos,Vojtech Hainer,Arnaud Basdevant,Nick Finer,Martin Fried,Elisabeth M. H. Mathus-Vliegen,Dragan Micic,Maximo Maislos,Gabriela Roman,Yves Schutz,Hermann Toplak,Barbara Zahorska-Markiewicz +11 more
TL;DR: Doctors have a responsibility to recognise obesity as a disease and help obese patients with appropriate prevention and treatment, and treatment should be based on good clinical care and evidence-based interventions and obesity treatment should focus on realistic goals and lifelong management.
481
Body composition interpretation. Contributions of the fat-free mass index and the body fat mass index.
TL;DR: BMI alone cannot provide information about the respective contribution of FFM or fat mass to body weight, so FFMI and BFMI values that correspond to low, normal, overweight, and obese BMIs are presented.
449