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via ClinicalTrials.gov Clinical trial
Aging, Lifestyle and Inflammation in Veterans Exercising
Authors not listed
University of Maryland, Baltimore · 2005
Abstract
Over half of adults in this country are overweight. This increases risk for heart and blood pressure problems, cancer, stroke and arthritis. While it is difficult to lose large amounts of weight and keep it off, even small amounts of weight loss can improve health. Furthermore, fat is increasingly recognized as a source of substances that increase inflammation. It may be that some of the adverse consequences of being overweight are due to increased inflammation. We are asking you to volunteer for a research study in which you may lose a moderate amount of weight and increase your activity. It is important that you read and understand the information on this form.
The purposes of these studies are to determine the influence(s) of age and body composition on the production of inflammatory chemicals by fat (adipose tissue), the mechanisms controlling this, and if a weight loss and aerobic exercise intervention results in a decrease in inflammation.
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- 2026-05-31 MST
Cite this
APA
Anonymous. (2005). Aging, Lifestyle and Inflammation in Veterans Exercising. <em>University of Maryland, Baltimore</em>. https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT00667030
Vancouver
Anonymous. Aging, Lifestyle and Inflammation in Veterans Exercising. University of Maryland, Baltimore. 2005.
BibTeX
@misc{anon2005AgingL,
title = {Aging, Lifestyle and Inflammation in Veterans Exercising},
author = {Anonymous},
journal = {University of Maryland, Baltimore},
year = {2005},
}
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