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Hans-Georg Predel

Researcher at German Sport University Cologne

Publications -  174
Citations -  2645

Hans-Georg Predel is an academic researcher from German Sport University Cologne. The author has contributed to research in topics: Randomized controlled trial & Atrial natriuretic peptide. The author has an hindex of 22, co-authored 158 publications receiving 2288 citations. Previous affiliations of Hans-Georg Predel include University of Cologne & University of Bonn.

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Correlation between BMI, leisure habits and motor abilities in childhood (CHILT-Project)

TL;DR: Overweight/obesity is associated with a poorer body gross motor development and endurance performance, on the other hand, an active lifestyle is positively correlated with a bettergross motor development in first-grade children.
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Fasting serum insulin and the homeostasis model of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) in the monitoring of lifestyle interventions in obese persons.

TL;DR: Assessment of the HOMA-IR may help to individualize lifestyle interventions in obesity and to objectify improvements in insulin sensitivity after therapeutic lifestyle changes.
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Iron status in elite young athletes: gender-dependent influences of diet and exercise

TL;DR: Diet, exercise and haematological data from 193 elite athletes from 24 different sports were analyzed retrospectively, finding that most female athletes failed to meet the recommended daily allowance for iron, even though dietary iron density was higher than in males.
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Diclofenac patch for topical treatment of acute impact injuries: a randomised, double blind, placebo controlled, multicentre study

TL;DR: A newly developed diclofenac patch is effective and safe for the treatment of blunt impact injuries and produced rapid pain relief as reflected by the time to reach resolution of pain at the injured site which was significantly shorter compared to placebo.
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Physical activity, leisure habits and obesity in first-grade children.

TL;DR: Examinations with first-grade children show no differences in active leisure habits between obese children and their counterparts, although the former had poorer results in motor abilities, but they spend more time on sedentary leisure habits like audiovisual media.