Hannah completed her undergraduate degree in Sports and Exercise Science and postgraduate degree in Exercise Physiology.
Hannah is currently a PhD candidate in cardiovascular physiology.
PhD Title: “One (exer)cise fits all?” why cardiovascular disease patients show smaller vascular benefits of exercise training compared to healthy individual” under the supervision of Dr Nicola Hopkins, Prof. Dick Thijssen and Dr Ellen Dawson.
Degrees
2020, Liverpool John Moores University, UK, MSc, Exercise Physiology
2019, Liverpool John Moores University, UK, BSc, Sports and Exercise Science
Journal article
McLellan HL, Dawson EA, Eijsvogels TMH, Thijssen DHJ, Bakker EA. 2024. Impact of Hypertension on the Dose-Response Association Between Physical Activity and Stroke: A Cohort Study Stroke, 55 :2231-2239 DOI Author Url Publisher Url Public Url
McLellan HL, Dawson EA, Hopkins ND, Jones H, Maiorana AJ, Hopman MTE, Haynes A, Naylor LH, Green DJ, Thijssen DHJ. 2024. Relation Between Endothelial Dysfunction and Exercise Training-Mediated Adaptation in Cardiovascular Risk Factors, Cardiorespiratory Fitness, and Vascular Health in Humans: A seconadary analysis Journal of Science in Sport and Exercise, DOI Publisher Url Public Url
Thesis/Dissertation
McLellan H. 2024. Exercise training and Cardioprotection: Interaction with Cardiovascular Risk Factors and Disease Dawson E, Thijssen D. Public Url
preprint
McLellan HL, Dawson EA, Eijsvogels TMH, Thijssen DHJ, Bakker EA. 2023. The impact of hypertension on the dose-response association between physical activity and stroke: A cohort study among 139,930 adults from the Netherlands Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory DOI Publisher Url
Conference presentation:
Does Ischemic Preconditioning enhance the effects of exercise training on cerebrovascular function?, British Association of Sport and Exercise Science (BASES) Transforming Lives Student Conference, Dundee UK, Oral presentation. 2019