about
Dietary intake modification in response to a participation in a resistance training program for sedentary older adults with prediabetes: findings from the Resist Diabetes study.Theory-based approach for maintaining resistance training in older adults with prediabetes: adherence, barriers, self-regulation strategies, treatment fidelity, costs.Resist diabetes: A randomized clinical trial for resistance training maintenance in adults with prediabetes.The effect of prebiotic supplementation with inulin on cardiometabolic health: Rationale, design, and methods of a controlled feeding efficacy trial in adults at risk of type 2 diabetes.Vitamin D status relative to diet, lifestyle, injury, and illness in college athletes.Dietary Intake, Body Composition, and Menstrual Cycle Changes during Competition Preparation and Recovery in a Drug-Free Figure Competitor: A Case Study.Sodium intake and blood pressure: new controversies, new labels . . . new guidelines?Do rhythms exist in elbow flexor torque, oral temperature and muscle thickness during normal waking hours?Does the time of your health screening alter your "health"?Resistance training is associated with spontaneous changes in aerobic physical activity but not overall diet quality in adults with prediabetes.Urinary Excretion of Sodium, Nitrogen, and Sugar Amounts Are Valid Biomarkers of Dietary Sodium, Protein, and High Sugar Intake in Nonobese Adolescents.Skeletal muscle autophagy and mitophagy in endurance-trained runners before and after a high-fat meal.Comparison of surgical versus diet-induced weight loss on appetite regulation and metabolic health outcomesAdolescents perceive a low added sugar adequate fiber diet to be more satiating and equally palatable compared to a high added sugar low fiber diet in a randomized-crossover design controlled feeding pilot trialShort-term changes in added sugar consumption by adolescents reflected in the carbon isotope ratio of fingerstick bloodAppetite-Related Responses to Overfeeding and Longitudinal Weight Change in Obesity-Prone and Obesity-Resistant AdultsLetter to the editor
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description
investigador
@es
researcher
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name
Tanya M Halliday
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type
label
Tanya M Halliday
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prefLabel
Tanya M Halliday
@en
P31
P496
0000-0001-6178-0686