Cite
Elite volunteer athletes of different sport disciplines may have elevated baseline GH levels divorced from unaltered levels of both IGF-I and GH-dependent bone and collagen markers: a study on-the-field.
MLA
Sartorio, A., et al. “Elite Volunteer Athletes of Different Sport Disciplines May Have Elevated Baseline GH Levels Divorced from Unaltered Levels of Both IGF-I and GH-Dependent Bone and Collagen Markers: A Study on-the-Field.” Journal of Endocrinological Investigation, vol. 27, no. 5, May 2004, pp. 410–15. EBSCOhost, https://doi.org/10.1007/BF03345283.
APA
Sartorio, A., Marazzi, N., Agosti, F., Faglia, G., Corradini, C., De Palo, E., Cella, S., Rigamonti, A., & Muller, E. E. (2004). Elite volunteer athletes of different sport disciplines may have elevated baseline GH levels divorced from unaltered levels of both IGF-I and GH-dependent bone and collagen markers: a study on-the-field. Journal of Endocrinological Investigation, 27(5), 410–415. https://doi.org/10.1007/BF03345283
Chicago
Sartorio, A, N Marazzi, F Agosti, G Faglia, C Corradini, E De Palo, S Cella, A Rigamonti, and E E Muller. 2004. “Elite Volunteer Athletes of Different Sport Disciplines May Have Elevated Baseline GH Levels Divorced from Unaltered Levels of Both IGF-I and GH-Dependent Bone and Collagen Markers: A Study on-the-Field.” Journal of Endocrinological Investigation 27 (5): 410–15. doi:10.1007/BF03345283.