Results 161 to 170 of about 96,580 (267)
Abstract Blood flow in the inactive limb tissues and skin is widely thought to decline during incremental exercise to exhaustion due to augmented sympathoadrenal vasoconstrictor activity, but direct evidence to support this view is lacking. Here, we investigated the inactive‐forearm haemodynamic (Q̇forearm${\dot{Q}}_{\mathrm{forearm}}$) and oxygenation
Steven J. Trangmar +1 more
wiley +1 more source
Medial cephalic to proximal ulnar artery fistulas enabled by a nitinol extravascular support device produce significantly higher maturation rates than brachial-based fistulas. [PDF]
Blessios G.
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract Repeated hot water immersion can improve cardiovascular health; however, the respective effects of distinct immersion protocols remain unclear. Twenty‐two healthy adults completed three 30‐min hot water immersion bouts of different water temperatures and immersion depths (40°C shoulder‐deep immersion, 40‐Shoulder; 42°C waist‐deep immersion, 42‐
Campbell Menzies +5 more
wiley +1 more source
Pre-Emptive Brachial Plexus Block as an Access-Facilitating Technique for Transradial Neuroendovascular Procedures in Patients with a Small Radial Artery. [PDF]
Fukutome K +10 more
europepmc +1 more source
Acute cardiovascular changes following heat exposure during simulated shipboard firefighting
Abstract Like structural firefighting, shipboard firefighting requires extreme exertion. However, shipboard firefighting may be a unique cardiovascular stress as most sailors lack extensive firefighting experience and may complete significant work before reaching the fire scene.
Daniel K. Sweet +7 more
wiley +1 more source
Identifying the interaction between skin temperature, maintained thermal comfort, and conduit artery shear rate through limb passive heating. [PDF]
Schabbehard EL, Nessler S, Lawley JS.
europepmc +1 more source
Abstract Exercise and heat stress have been reported to independently provide benefits to brain health. We tested the hypothesis that 8 weeks of post‐exercise local heating, passive local heating only, or exercise training only improves cognitive performance compared to a control group.
Jem L. Cheng +6 more
wiley +1 more source
A Simple Test to Detect Deltoid Function
Anil Bhatia +2 more
doaj +1 more source

