Karlsson, Ø, Govus, A. D., McGawley, K & Hanstock, H. G. (2024). Metabolic phenotyping from whole-blood responses to a standardized exercise test may discriminate for physiological, performance, and illness outcomes: A pilot study in highly-trained cross-country skiers. Sports Medicine - Open, 10 , Article 99. Zugriff am 09.10.2024 unter https://doi.org/10.1186/s40798-024-00770-0
APA (7th ed.) CitationKarlsson, Ø., Govus, A. D., McGawley, K., & Hanstock, H. G. (2024). Metabolic phenotyping from whole-blood responses to a standardized exercise test may discriminate for physiological, performance, and illness outcomes: A pilot study in highly-trained cross-country skiers. Sports Medicine - Open, 10, Article 99.
Chicago Style (17th ed.) CitationKarlsson, Ø, A. D. Govus, K. McGawley, and H. G. Hanstock. "Metabolic Phenotyping from Whole-blood Responses to a Standardized Exercise Test May Discriminate for Physiological, Performance, and Illness Outcomes: A Pilot Study in Highly-trained Cross-country Skiers." Sports Medicine - Open 10 (2024): Article 99.
MLA (9th ed.) CitationKarlsson, Ø, et al. "Metabolic Phenotyping from Whole-blood Responses to a Standardized Exercise Test May Discriminate for Physiological, Performance, and Illness Outcomes: A Pilot Study in Highly-trained Cross-country Skiers." Sports Medicine - Open, vol. 10, 2024, p. Article 99.