Cardenas, M. A., Levitt, M, Burgess, B, Haston, C, Jaitner, A, Mitchell, J & Phillips, M. D. (2017). HIT vs. LSD: Four days of intensive training does not influence lactoferrin, but LSD increases resting IL-6 while attenuating the acute exercise response, yet HIT elevates salivary cortisol levels. International Journal of Exercise Science Conference Proceedings, 2 (9), 49. Zugriff am 12.03.2019 unter https://digitalcommons.wku.edu/ijesab/vol2/iss9/49
APA-Zitierstil (7. Ausg.)Cardenas, M. A., Levitt, M., Burgess, B., Haston, C., Jaitner, A., Mitchell, J., & Phillips, M. D. (2017). HIT vs. LSD: Four days of intensive training does not influence lactoferrin, but LSD increases resting IL-6 while attenuating the acute exercise response, yet HIT elevates salivary cortisol levels. International Journal of Exercise Science Conference Proceedings, 2(9), 49.
Chicago-Zitierstil (17. Ausg.)Cardenas, M. A., M. Levitt, B. Burgess, C. Haston, A. Jaitner, J. Mitchell, und M. D. Phillips. "HIT Vs. LSD: Four Days of Intensive Training Does Not Influence Lactoferrin, but LSD Increases Resting IL-6 While Attenuating the Acute Exercise Response, yet HIT Elevates Salivary Cortisol Levels." International Journal of Exercise Science Conference Proceedings 2, no. 9 (2017): 49.
MLA-Zitierstil (9. Ausg.)Cardenas, M. A., et al. "HIT Vs. LSD: Four Days of Intensive Training Does Not Influence Lactoferrin, but LSD Increases Resting IL-6 While Attenuating the Acute Exercise Response, yet HIT Elevates Salivary Cortisol Levels." International Journal of Exercise Science Conference Proceedings, vol. 2, no. 9, 2017, p. 49.