Results 261 to 270 of about 130,952 (308)
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Skeletal muscle regeneration

Muscle & Nerve, 1981
AbstractThe historical and current research literature is reviewed with special attention to the role of the satellite cell in the reconstitution of skeletal muscle following damage. Implications for the clinical management of trauma patients are stressed in the light of this new knowledge.
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Skeletal-Muscle Regeneration

New England Journal of Medicine, 1971
There has been for many years an almost complete lack of communication between the general pathologist and the experimental morphologist on the question of the ability of skeletal muscle to regenerate. I have consistently taught first-year medical students that the difference between muscle regeneration in the lowly salamander on which I work and the ...
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Metabolic studies of skeletal muscle regeneration

Experimental Neurology, 1974
Metabolic studies were carried out on regenerating skeletal muscle in the rat following intramuscular injection of the myotoxic agent Marcaine plus hyaluronidase or after mincing and autoimplantation. Both after mincing and following injection of Marcaine, the ability to oxidize glucose-6-14C and palmitate-1-14C was lost, while the oxidation of glucose-
D H, Rifenberick, C L, Koski, S R, Max
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Regeneration versus fibrosis in skeletal muscle

Current Opinion in Rheumatology, 2011
This review evaluates recently published literature examining various muscle tissue cells and their modulators that determine whether injured skeletal muscle will fully regenerate or become fibrotic.Muscle regeneration is a complex process involving several interacting cell types. Macrophages initiate a cytokine response to injury that both directs the
Adam L, Moyer, Kathryn R, Wagner
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Towards Understanding Skeletal Muscle Regeneration

Pathology - Research and Practice, 1991
Factors which effect proliferation and fusion of muscle precursor cells have been studied extensively in tissue culture, although little is known about these events in vivo. This review assesses the tissue culture derived data with a view to understanding factors which may control the regeneration of mature skeletal muscle in vivo. The following topics
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Myostatin regulation during skeletal muscle regeneration

Journal of Cellular Physiology, 2000
Myostatin, a member of the TGF-beta superfamily, is a key negative regulator of skeletal muscle growth. The role of myostatin during skeletal muscle regeneration has not previously been reported. In the present studies, normal Sprague-Dawley and growth hormone (GH)-deficient (dw/dw) rats were administered the myotoxin, notexin, in the right M.
S, Kirk   +5 more
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Skeletal Muscle Stem Cells for Muscle Regeneration

2014
Adult skeletal muscle possesses remarkable regenerative capacity. Muscle regeneration is mediated by a rare population of muscle stem cells that reside between the basal lamina and sarcolemma of muscle fibers. Due to their anatomical location, muscle stem cells have been coined satellite cells.
Johnny, Kim, Thomas, Braun
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Molecular Basis of Skeletal Muscle Regeneration

Canadian Journal of Applied Physiology, 1996
Skeletal muscle regeneration is a vital process with important implications for various muscle myopathies and adaptations to physiological overload. Few of the molecular regulatory proteins controlling this process have so far been identified. Several growth factors have defined effects on myogenic precursor cells and appear to also be involved during ...
R L, Chambers, J C, McDermott
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Fenestrations in regenerating skeletal muscle capillaries

American Journal of Anatomy, 1977
AbstractA new observation of fenestrae with diaphragms in the endothelial wall of regenerating skeletal muscle capillaries is described in seven‐day‐old wounds of the cremaster muscle of adult male guinea pigs. The fenestrations were 44 nm in diameter and contained diaphragms with a central dense structure.
R V, McKinney, B B, Singh, P D, Brewer
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Cellular Biomechanics in Skeletal Muscle Regeneration

2018
Satellite cells, adult stem cells in skeletal muscle tissue, reside within a mechanically dynamic three-dimensional microenvironment. With each contraction-relaxation cycle, a satellite cell is expected to experience tensile, shear, and compressive stresses, and through cell-extracellular matrix interactions, also gauge the stiffness of the niche.
Edward W, Li   +2 more
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