Endocrine and cytokine responses to standardized physical stress in multiple sclerosis.

Standard

Endocrine and cytokine responses to standardized physical stress in multiple sclerosis. / Heesen, Christoph; Gold, Stefan M; Hartmann, Sten; Mladek, Mila; Reer, Rüdiger; Braumann, Klaus-Michael; Wiedemann, Klaus; Schulz, Karl-Heinz.

in: BRAIN BEHAV IMMUN, Jahrgang 17, Nr. 6, 6, 2003, S. 473-481.

Publikationen: SCORING: Beitrag in Fachzeitschrift/ZeitungSCORING: ZeitschriftenaufsatzForschungBegutachtung

Harvard

Heesen, C, Gold, SM, Hartmann, S, Mladek, M, Reer, R, Braumann, K-M, Wiedemann, K & Schulz, K-H 2003, 'Endocrine and cytokine responses to standardized physical stress in multiple sclerosis.', BRAIN BEHAV IMMUN, Jg. 17, Nr. 6, 6, S. 473-481. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14583239?dopt=Citation>

APA

Heesen, C., Gold, S. M., Hartmann, S., Mladek, M., Reer, R., Braumann, K-M., Wiedemann, K., & Schulz, K-H. (2003). Endocrine and cytokine responses to standardized physical stress in multiple sclerosis. BRAIN BEHAV IMMUN, 17(6), 473-481. [6]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/14583239?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Heesen C, Gold SM, Hartmann S, Mladek M, Reer R, Braumann K-M et al. Endocrine and cytokine responses to standardized physical stress in multiple sclerosis. BRAIN BEHAV IMMUN. 2003;17(6):473-481. 6.

Bibtex

@article{98209aa753f54fcfad3c90b0c8508bcd,
title = "Endocrine and cytokine responses to standardized physical stress in multiple sclerosis.",
abstract = "Since the earliest descriptions psychological and physical stress has been considered a controversial but potentially important factor in the onset and course of multiple sclerosis (MS). During recent years it has become clear that MS patients benefit from physical exercise as performed in aerobic training. As acute exercise has profound effects on immune and endocrine parameters we studied endocrine and immune response to standardized physical stress in MS within a study of aerobic training. Fifteen MS patients completed an eight-week aerobic training program, 13 patients were part of a wait-control group. Twenty healthy controls were recruited as well. A step-by-step bicycle ergometry was performed to determine individual exertion levels. For the endurance test patients exercised at 60% VO2 max for 30 min. Blood samples were drawn before, directly after and 30 min after completion of the exercise. Heart rate and lactate increased in all groups (p",
author = "Christoph Heesen and Gold, {Stefan M} and Sten Hartmann and Mila Mladek and R{\"u}diger Reer and Klaus-Michael Braumann and Klaus Wiedemann and Karl-Heinz Schulz",
year = "2003",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "17",
pages = "473--481",
journal = "BRAIN BEHAV IMMUN",
issn = "0889-1591",
publisher = "Academic Press Inc.",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Endocrine and cytokine responses to standardized physical stress in multiple sclerosis.

AU - Heesen, Christoph

AU - Gold, Stefan M

AU - Hartmann, Sten

AU - Mladek, Mila

AU - Reer, Rüdiger

AU - Braumann, Klaus-Michael

AU - Wiedemann, Klaus

AU - Schulz, Karl-Heinz

PY - 2003

Y1 - 2003

N2 - Since the earliest descriptions psychological and physical stress has been considered a controversial but potentially important factor in the onset and course of multiple sclerosis (MS). During recent years it has become clear that MS patients benefit from physical exercise as performed in aerobic training. As acute exercise has profound effects on immune and endocrine parameters we studied endocrine and immune response to standardized physical stress in MS within a study of aerobic training. Fifteen MS patients completed an eight-week aerobic training program, 13 patients were part of a wait-control group. Twenty healthy controls were recruited as well. A step-by-step bicycle ergometry was performed to determine individual exertion levels. For the endurance test patients exercised at 60% VO2 max for 30 min. Blood samples were drawn before, directly after and 30 min after completion of the exercise. Heart rate and lactate increased in all groups (p

AB - Since the earliest descriptions psychological and physical stress has been considered a controversial but potentially important factor in the onset and course of multiple sclerosis (MS). During recent years it has become clear that MS patients benefit from physical exercise as performed in aerobic training. As acute exercise has profound effects on immune and endocrine parameters we studied endocrine and immune response to standardized physical stress in MS within a study of aerobic training. Fifteen MS patients completed an eight-week aerobic training program, 13 patients were part of a wait-control group. Twenty healthy controls were recruited as well. A step-by-step bicycle ergometry was performed to determine individual exertion levels. For the endurance test patients exercised at 60% VO2 max for 30 min. Blood samples were drawn before, directly after and 30 min after completion of the exercise. Heart rate and lactate increased in all groups (p

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 17

SP - 473

EP - 481

JO - BRAIN BEHAV IMMUN

JF - BRAIN BEHAV IMMUN

SN - 0889-1591

IS - 6

M1 - 6

ER -