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Chloe Rezola-Pardo

Researcher at University of the Basque Country

Publications -  18
Citations -  337

Chloe Rezola-Pardo is an academic researcher from University of the Basque Country. The author has contributed to research in topics: Randomized controlled trial & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 13 publications receiving 162 citations.

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Physical activity and fitness are associated with verbal memory, quality of life and depression among nursing home residents: preliminary data of a randomized controlled trial

TL;DR: Muscle strength and physical activity are factors positively associated with a better performance on the Rey Auditory-Verbal Learning Test, QoL-AD and Goldberg Depression Scale in older adults with mild to moderate cognitive impairment living in nursing homes.
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A multicomponent exercise program improves physical function in long-term nursing home residents: A randomized controlled trial

TL;DR: It is shown that a multicomponent exercise program is effective for older people living in LTNH, especially relevant in those with lower physical function scores.
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Serum Myostatin Levels Are Higher in Fitter, More Active, and Non-Frail Long-Term Nursing Home Residents and Increase after a Physical Exercise Intervention

TL;DR: Higher serum levels of myostatin were found to be associated with better physical fitness and the use of this protein as a biomarker for physical fitness, rather than frailty, merits further study.
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Effects of Multicomponent Exercise on Frailty in Long-Term Nursing Homes: A Randomized Controlled Trial.

TL;DR: To determine the effect of multicomponent exercise on frailty and related adverse outcomes in residents of long‐term nursing homes (LTNHs), a large number of patients were enrolled in a single study.
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Comparison between multicomponent and simultaneous dual-task exercise interventions in long-term nursing home residents: the Ageing-ONDUAL-TASK randomized controlled study.

TL;DR: The addition of simultaneous cognitive training to a multicomponent exercise program offers further benefits to dual-task, physical and cognitive performance, psycho-affective status, quality of life and frailty in LTNH residents.