Results 211 to 220 of about 1,162,787 (260)
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Injuries and physical stress

Journal of Biosocial Science, 1981
SummaryAfter classifying injuries, and giving examples of the ways in which they can arise, treatment, rehabilitation and the value of exercise are considered. Having given a review of the effects of increasing leisure time and sports participation, the value of legislation, education, protective clothing and close supervision in preventing the ...
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Integrating physical stress, growth, and development

Current Opinion in Plant Biology, 2010
Linking the gene regulatory network to morphogenesis is a central question in developmental biology. Shape relies on the combined actions of biochemistry and biophysics, two parameters that are under local genetic control. The blooming of molecular biology since the 1970s has promoted a biochemical view of development, leaving behind the contribution ...
Uyttewaal, M.   +2 more
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Interoception, Stress, and Physical Symptoms in Stress-Associated Diseases

European Journal of Health Psychology, 2020
Abstract. The brain and peripheral bodily organs continuously exchange information. Exemplary, interoception refers to the processing and perception of ascending information from the body to the brain. Stress responses involve a neurobehavioral cascade, which includes the activation of peripheral organs via neural and endocrine pathways and can thus ...
André Schulz   +2 more
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Physical stress and emetine cardiotoxicity

Experientia, 1961
Nous rapportons ici des experiences sur le cobaye se rapportant a la toxicite de l'emetine pour le cœur, en particulier apres potentialisations par de exercices de nage.
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Death Following Physical Stress

JAMA: The Journal of the American Medical Association, 1978
Strenuous physical activity, such as shoveling snow, long has been suspected to be a contributing factor in a number of sudden cardiac deaths. Vuori et al 1 now provide support for this suspicion. They examined the circumstances surrounding 2,606 sudden deaths, and by reviewing the case histories and autopsy reports, they tried to establish ...
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Tissue Adaptation to Physical Stress: A Proposed “Physical Stress Theory” to Guide Physical Therapist Practice, Education, and Research

Physical Therapy, 2002
AbstractThe purpose of this perspective is to present a general theory—the Physical Stress Theory (PST). The basic premise of the PST is that changes in the relative level of physical stress cause a predictable adaptive response in all biological tissue.
Michael J, Mueller, Katrina S, Maluf
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Physical activity and stress in adult Hispanics

Journal of the American Association of Nurse Practitioners, 2015
Physical inactivity and obesity are major U.S. health concerns. Hispanics have higher rates of obesity and lower incidence of meeting physical activity (PA) recommendations, however most studies on PA focus on non-Hispanic Whites. This study examined type and amount of physical activities, and their relationship to age, BMI, employment, and stress in ...
Jean, Hannan   +5 more
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Physical Countermeasures to Stress

2011
Since the beginning of manned spaceflight, the challenge for space science is to avoid or minimize physiological degeneration processes of the musculoskeletal and cardiovascular system caused by missing gravity. With ongoing mission it became clear that weightlessness and isolation in space has an impact also on cognitive performance and mood.
Vera Abeln, Stefan Schneider
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Physics of Stressed Solids

The Journal of Chemical Physics, 1940
The internal energy of a system is subdivided into a work or potential function and a thermal or kinetic function, the former expressed in terms of the current electrostatic theory of intercrystalline bonding, and these functions then examined for variations of temperature, hydrostatic pressure, unidirectional stress and combined hydrostatic and ...
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The Variation of Hand Steadiness with Physical Stress

Journal of Motor Behavior, 1981
The performance of 12 subjects in a hand steadiness task was compared at different work loads. Hand steadiness expressed in the form of values of hand shakiness was found not to increase linearly with work intensity. On the contrary, the relation between hand shakiness and activation level, induced by physical work, was found to be positively ...
G, Borg, H, Sjöberg
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