Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 11
pro vyhledávání: '"C R Kirby"'
Autor:
C. R. Kirby, F. W. Booth
Publikováno v:
American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology. 262:R329-R332
Skeletal muscle is a dynamic organ that adapts to alterations in weight bearing. This brief review examines changes in muscle gene expression resulting from the removal of weight bearing by hindlimb suspension and from increased weight bearing due to
Publikováno v:
The American journal of physiology. 264(6 Pt 1)
The present study examined whether exercise duration was associated with elevated and/or sustained elevations of postexercise adenosine 3',5'-cyclic monophosphate (cAMP) by measuring cAMP levels in skeletal muscle for up to 4 h after acute exercise b
Publikováno v:
Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise. 25:S128
Publikováno v:
Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise. 24:S60
Publikováno v:
Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise. 24:S4
Autor:
C. R. Kirby, M. E. Tischler
Publikováno v:
Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise. 22:S108
Publikováno v:
New England Journal of Medicine. 296:1354-1356
In the Report of the Sanitary Commission of Massachusetts, 1850, Lemuel Shattuck compared mortality rates for earlier years in urban Boston and in country towns with those reported from England. Sh...
Publikováno v:
Aviation, space, and environmental medicine. 57(4)
Ventilation (VE), CO2 output (VCO2), oxygen uptake (VO2), respiratory exchange ratio (R), and the ventilatory equivalents for VO2 and VCO2 were measured during graded exercise before and after 10 d of continuous bed rest (BR) in the -6 degrees head-d
Publikováno v:
Aviation, space, and environmental medicine. 56(6)
The effect of repeated weightlessness exposures on maximal aerobic capacity was determined when seven healthy men (36-48 yr) underwent two 10-d bedrest (BR) periods in the -6 degrees headdown position, which were separated by a 14-d recovery period.
Publikováno v:
Journal of human stress. 5(3)
The relation of the social environment to excess mortality from diseases involving hypertension was investigated by correlating demographic, social and economic data with age-sex standardized mortality ratios for these diseases in the 39 mental healt