Iconocast Logo

Welcome To Iconocast

How to add a URL link from your web site to the Iconocast web sites

Virtual tour of Southern California



 

Recent News and Articles on the Keywords: muscle + web + 0.54  Related to the article below (Last Update: 8/5/2008)

Fitsync tracks, organizes workouts on your iPhone
CNET News, CA -
You can the see how far you're progressing with each muscle group or particular exercise, and even get recommendations for other exercises based on what ...

PR Web (press release)
UFC Fans will Love OrbitNutrition.com, New MMA Workout Store ...
PR Web (press release), WA - 41 minutes ago
... who defends his crown this September, can ramp up muscle and mental focus with the wholesale web store's super muscle building supplements. ...
WEB EXCLUSIVE: Kenny Chesney And Friends Bring Smiles To Ford Field
Royal Oak Daily Tribune, MI -
... including longtime Rolling Stones saxophonist Jim Horn, brought some extra muscle to favorites such as "Live Those Songs," a tandem of "Beer in Mexico" ...

New York Daily News
A pill that is hard to swallow
Daily American Online, PA - Aug 1, 2008
Secondly, this new ?exercise pill,? known as AICAR pill, explains that it helps to trick the body?s muscle response into making it ?seemingly? feel as ...
Exercise Pill Could Replace Steroids, Help Improve Athletes ChattahBox
Exercise Pill Could Help Athletes, Replace Use Of Steroids dBTechno
Exercise Benefits In A Pill Could Be Coming Soon Chatter Shmatter
Seattle Times - Media Newswire (press release)
all 678 news articles »
College prep advocates stress tough classes
WSBT-TV, IN -
A new media campaign featuring muscle-bound gladiators and bullfighters urges teens to "get tough" and take advanced classes ? such as foreign languages, ...
Ask Dr. Weil: Breathing techniques can be helpful
Arizona Daily Star, AZ - 37 minutes ago
Nor is there any evidence demonstrating that vanadium can improve athletic performance and increase muscle mass, even though vanadium supplements are widely ...

Memphis Daily News
Watchdog Seeks Financial Muscle, Volunteers
Memphis Daily News,  USA - Aug 1, 2008
Saino ? whose Web site, www.memphiswatchdog.org, includes a cartoon of an angry-looking guard dog near the top of the page ? is in the process of setting up ...
It's easy to add healthy, unrefined food to your diet
Sarasota Herald-Tribune, FL -
Whole grains also are sources of magnesium (for building bones and releasing muscle energy) and selenium (for protecting cells from oxidation). ...
An Olympic Stadium Worth Remembering
New York Times, United States -
At the center of it all is this dazzling stadium, which is said to embody everything from China?s muscle-flexing nationalism to a newfound cultural ...
AL | Yankees' Dominican scouts facing scrutiny
Seattle Times, United States - 43 minutes ago
He played in only 23 games. Tampa Bay: OF Rocco Baldelli (chronic muscle fatigue) worked out with the Rays and might be close to returning to play.
Source: Google News

Muscle strength in overwintering bears -
HJ Harlow, T Lohuis, TDI Beck, PA Iaizzo - Nature, 2001 - nature.com
... access provided to Googlebot Access by Web Services. ... their natural setting by measuring
muscle contraction in ... registers typically as around 0.54 newton metres ...

[PDF] Biomagnification of mercury in an Antarctic marine coastal food web -
R Bargagli, F Monaci, JC Sanchez-Hernandez, D … - Marine Ecology Progress Series, 1998 - int-res.com
... different habitats, positions in the food web and feeding ... for low concentrations
reported for muscle of Arctocephalus ... t 0.08 This study Feathers 5 0.54 t 0.18 ...
-

… of two-minute incremental threshold loading and maximal loading as measures of respiratory muscle -
G McElvaney - Chest, 1989 - Am Coll Chest Phys
... be found online on the World Wide Web at: The ... piratory muscle endurance (RME) as
the sustainable inspiratory pressure ... 1.00 i.00 0.72 0.46 0.50 0.34 0.41 0.54 ...

Effects of controlled inspiratory muscle training in patients with COPD: a meta-analysis -
F Lotters, B van Tol, G Kwakkel, R Gosselink - European Respiratory Journal, 2002 - Eur Respiratory Soc
... with inspiratory muscle weakness (16 cmH 2 O, z=4.08, p<0.001), but not in the group
without inspiratory muscle weakness (?3 cmH 2 0, z=?0.61, p=0.54) (fig ...

Zmpste24 deficiency in mice causes spontaneous bone fractures, muscle weakness, and a prelamin A … -
MO Bergo, B Gavino, J Ross, WK Schmidt, C Hong, LV … - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2002 - National Acad Sciences
... Because the masseter is a crucial muscle for moving the jaw, it is likely ... This ratio
was lower in Zmpste24 / mice (0.54 ? 0.09) than in littermate Zmpste24 ...

Leptin increases FA oxidation in lean but not obese human skeletal muscle: evidence of peripheral … -
GR Steinberg, ML Parolin, GJF Heigenhauser, DJ … - American Journal of Physiology- Endocrinology And Metabolism, 2002 - Am Physiological Soc
... Total FA uptake (r = 0.54, P = 0.027) and esterification to ... GL Dohm, and JA Houmard
Skeletal muscle lipid metabolism ... in: AJP - Endo Online ISI Web of Science ...

Skeletal muscle lipid metabolism with obesity -
MW Hulver, JR Berggren, RN Cortright, RW Dudek, RP … - American Journal of Physiology- Endocrinology And Metabolism, 2003 - Am Physiological Soc
... Search for citing articles in: ISI Web of Science ... shown that intact rectus abdominus
muscle strips from ... Palmitate incorporation into IMTG (R = 0.54, P = 0.007 ...

From the Cover: Decline in skeletal muscle mitochondrial function with aging in humans -
KR Short, ML Bigelow, J Kahl, R Singh, J Coenen- … - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2005 - National Acad Sciences
... 1. Decline in muscle MAPR and citrate synthase activity with age ... positively related
to lean mass of the legs (r = 0.88, P < 0.001) and MAPR (r = 0.54, P < 0.001 ...

Does normal pump function belie muscle dysfunction in patients with chronic severe mitral … -
T Wisenbaugh - Circulation, 1988 - Am Heart Assoc
... ahajournals.org located on the World Wide Web at: The ... 13 with EFs greater than 0.60
had muscle dysfunction, falling ... group was 0.54 + 0.15 (n = 23; table 1). MR ...

Role of T-type calcium channels in myogenic tone of skeletal muscle resistance arteries -
E VanBavel, O Sorop, D Andreasen, M Pfaffendorf, … - American Journal of Physiology- Heart and Circulatory …, 2002 - Am Physiological Soc
... the same level as in the previous series: 0.54 ? 0.03 (P ... activated calcium channels
in vascular smooth muscle: T-type ... Similar articles in ISI Web of Science. ...

Source: Google Scholar
 

The Eyes Have It: The Eye Muscles, Those Go-Getters Of The Anatomical World,
May Provide Clues To Muscular Dystrophy, Myasthenia Gravis

Washington — The eye, often called the window to the soul, may become a window to the mysteries of muscular dystrophy, a debilitating muscle disease that often leads to death in early adulthood.

Physiologists are intrigued that muscular dystrophy spares a few muscles of the body -- notably the vocal cords, some muscles of the pelvic region and the eye muscles. What is it that allows these muscles to escape the effects of this deadly disease while other skeletal muscles are so profoundly affected? At the same time, the eye muscles fall prey to diseases that do not affect other skeletal muscles. Why?

These are some of the intriguing questions that four eye muscle experts will explore at the symposium, “Ultra fast and ultra active: the strange life of the extraocular muscles.” The symposium will take place at the 120th annual meeting of The American Physiological Society (APS), which coincides with Experimental Biology 2007. The session will be held at 10:30 a.m., Tuesday, May 1 in Room 147A of the Washington Convention Center.

Article continues below and (thank you)

 

“We think that by learning what makes these muscles unique, we will understand why they are spared by some neuromuscular diseases and targeted by others,” said Francisco H. Andrade, Ph.D., who will lead the symposium. “These insights will lead, in turn, to better treatment options for these diseases.”

The speakers, who are among only a handful of experts on the topic in the U.S., are Linda K. McLoon, Ph.D., a professor at the University of Minnesota, Minneapolis; Francisco H. Andrade, Ph.D. an associate professor at the University of Kentucky College of Medicine, Lexington; Henry J. Kaminski, M.D. the chairman of the neurology and psychiatry department at the St. Louis University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri; and Stephen J. Goldberg, Ph.D., a professor (now retired) at Virginia Commonwealth University, Richmond. Andrade will also lead the symposium.

On the go

The extraocular muscles are the six small muscles that move each eye from side to side, up and down and on the slant. When these muscles don’t work together, it can affect vision. One condition that can arise when these muscles don’t work together is strabismus, a condition that affects about 5% of children and arises when the eye muscles don’t work together properly. This leads to “lazy eye,” in which one eye takes over all the vision duties. If strabismus is not treated, it results in functional blindness.

A defining characteristic of these tiny muscles is that they are nearly always moving, even during sleep. In fact, even when “staring” at a fixed object, the eyes keep moving over the image. Although these muscles are very small, they use a lot of energy because they are always on the go.

And that is a key to Dr. Andrade’s presentation, “Always active, always hungry: the metabolic design of the extraocular muscles.” The cells that make up the extraocular muscles contain more mitochondria, the energy manufacturing structures in all cells, than other skeletal muscles, such as those of the limbs. This rich population of mitochondria allows the muscles to keep moving the eye. On the other hand, this leaves the eye muscles vulnerable to diseases that target the mitochondria, such as Kearns-Sayre syndrome, a condition that gradually limits eye movements and eventually immobilizes them completely.

Dr. McLoon will discuss “Dynamic cell biology of the extraocular muscles.” She looks at satellite cells, a type of cell involved in muscle growth and injury repair. The extraocular muscles are richer in satellite cells than the skeletal muscles of the limbs. There is evidence that eye muscles regenerate much faster than skeletal muscle of the limbs. This may be a key to why the eyes have a greater ability to withstand the onslaught of muscular dystrophy. Another very important aim of Dr. McLoon’s research is to find new drugs to treat strabismus.

Dr. Kaminski will talk about the “Differential involvement of extraocular muscle by neuromuscular disease.” His work focuses on myasthenia gravis, an autoimmune disease which disrupts communication between muscles and nerves. The illness particularly affects the eye muscles, causing drooping eyelids and double vision. Dr. Kaminski focuses on the eye’s immune environment. He looks at what role this plays in the eye muscles’ vulnerability to myasthenia gravis. If this process can be better understood, it could eventually lead to new treatments. His research also has implications for Graves disease, an auto-immune thyroid disorder in which the extraocular muscles get enlarged causing the eyes to bulge out.

Dr. Goldberg will speak on “Eye muscle motor units: a petite illumination.” His laboratory investigates the motor neurons of the brainstem which are involved in tongue and eye movements.  (When a doctor asks a patient to follow his or her finger, the patient’s brainstem functioning is being tested.)  This research has applications to strabismus. When rats have strabismus, they can later recover vision in both eyes, but humans permanently lose the ability to have normal vision. This finding has been a tantalizing one for physiologists, who want to find out how rats manage to recoup their vision. The hope is to find out how this can be applied to humans.

***

To schedule an interview with one of the presenters, please e-mail Christine Guilfoy or call her at (301) 634-7253, prior to April 28. During the conference, please call the APS press room at (202) 249-4174.

Please click here for the APS program at Experimental Biology 2007.

Physiology is the study of how molecules, cells, tissues and organs function to create health or disease. The American Physiological Society has been an integral part of this scientific discovery process since it was established in 1887.

 
 
 
Google
Web www.iconocast.com
 
 
Source for News : URL: http://www.medicalnewstoday.com and Reuters
Continue News With: News7 ; News8 ; News9 ; News9A


ADVERTISEMENT

Iconocast is about learning and teaching without borders; we offer eMarketing, Internet Advertising, Internet Marketing, Search Engine Optimization, Search Engine Marketing, Online Branding, and eMarketing News Services.

 

Iconocast Home Page

 © 2002-2006

Keywords:

Contact Iconocast