Skip to content
Open access · US-GOV via ClinicalTrials.gov Clinical trial

Postmenopausal Oncological Women Exercising for Recover Their Health. Associations and Changes in Metabolic Flexibility and Autonomic Control After Two Training Programs (Muscle Power vs Metabolic Power): the POWER Health Study

Authors not listed

University of Valencia · 2024

Abstract

POWER Health is a randomized clinical trial with a two-arm parallel design whose objectives are 1) to study metabolic flexibility and autonomic function (both capacities that describe cardiovascular health) in a sample of postmenopausal oncological women vs postmenopausal untreated controls (CT); and 2) to analyze the impact of two different 8-week physical exercise supervised interventions: HIIT training vs strength training focused on muscle power, on both cardiovascular capacities in these populations.

◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:

Read at source →

Provenance

Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Canonical
link ↗
Fetched
2026-05-29 MST

Cite this

APA
Anonymous. (2024). Postmenopausal Oncological Women Exercising for Recover Their Health. Associations and Changes in Metabolic Flexibility and Autonomic Control After Two Training Programs (Muscle Power vs Metabolic Power): the POWER Health Study. <em>University of Valencia</em>. https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT06336070
Vancouver
Anonymous. Postmenopausal Oncological Women Exercising for Recover Their Health. Associations and Changes in Metabolic Flexibility and Autonomic Control After Two Training Programs (Muscle Power vs Metabolic Power): the POWER Health Study. University of Valencia. 2024.
BibTeX
@misc{anon2024Postme, title = {Postmenopausal Oncological Women Exercising for Recover Their Health. Associations and Changes in Metabolic Flexibility and Autonomic Control After Two Training Programs (Muscle Power vs Metabolic Power): the POWER Health Study}, author = {Anonymous}, journal = {University of Valencia}, year = {2024}, }

Research neighborhood

References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.

Related findings