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1. Sixteen weeks of resistance training can decrease the risk of metabolic syndrome in healthy postmenopausal women

2. Comparison of maximal muscle strength of elbow flexors and knee extensors between younger and older men with the same level of daily activity

4. Higher resistance training volume offsets muscle hypertrophy nonresponsiveness in older individuals.

5. Adipocyte hypertrophy in mesenchymal stem cells from infants of mothers with obesity.

6. Dynamic transcriptomic responses to divergent acute exercise stimuli in young adults.

7. Interrelated but Not Time-Aligned Response in Myogenic Regulatory Factors Demethylation and mRNA Expression after Divergent Exercise Bouts.

8. Muscle transcriptomic circuits linked to periarticular physiology in end-stage osteoarthritis.

9. Resistance training variable manipulations are less relevant than intrinsic biology in affecting muscle fiber hypertrophy.

10. Session Rating of Perceived Exertion as an Efficient Tool for Individualized Resistance Training Progression.

11. State of Knowledge on Molecular Adaptations to Exercise in Humans: Historical Perspectives and Future Directions.

12. The Effect of Low-intensity Aerobic Training Combined with Blood Flow Restriction on Maximal Strength, Muscle Mass, and Cycling Performance in a Cyclist with Knee Displacement.

13. Daily Leucine Intake Is Positively Associated with Lower Limb Skeletal Muscle Mass and Strength in the Elderly.

14. Time Course of Skeletal Muscle miRNA Expression after Resistance, High-Intensity Interval, and Concurrent Exercise.

15. Aerobic Exercise-Induced Changes in Cardiorespiratory Fitness in Breast Cancer Patients Receiving Chemotherapy: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

16. Blood-Flow Restriction Resistance Exercise Promotes Lower Pain and Ratings of Perceived Exertion Compared With Either High- or Low-Intensity Resistance Exercise Performed to Muscular Failure.

17. Myofibrillar protein synthesis and muscle hypertrophy individualized responses to systematically changing resistance training variables in trained young men.

18. Individual Muscle Hypertrophy and Strength Responses to High vs. Low Resistance Training Frequencies.

19. Resistance training in young men induces muscle transcriptome-wide changes associated with muscle structure and metabolism refining the response to exercise-induced stress.

20. High-frequency resistance training does not promote greater muscular adaptations compared to low frequencies in young untrained men.

21. Effects of weightlifting exercise, traditional resistance and plyometric training on countermovement jump performance: a meta-analysis.

22. Magnitude of Muscle Strength and Mass Adaptations Between High-Load Resistance Training Versus Low-Load Resistance Training Associated with Blood-Flow Restriction: A Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis.

23. Early- and later-phases satellite cell responses and myonuclear content with resistance training in young men.

24. Resistance training-induced changes in integrated myofibrillar protein synthesis are related to hypertrophy only after attenuation of muscle damage.

26. Early resistance training-induced increases in muscle cross-sectional area are concomitant with edema-induced muscle swelling.

27. Time Course of Resistance Training-Induced Muscle Hypertrophy in the Elderly.

28. Effects of exercise intensity and occlusion pressure after 12 weeks of resistance training with blood-flow restriction.

29. Comparisons between low-intensity resistance training with blood flow restriction and high-intensity resistance training on quadriceps muscle mass and strength in elderly.

30. Vastus lateralis muscle cross-sectional area ultrasonography validity for image fitting in humans.

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