Search results for " Muscle"

showing 10 items of 1495 documents

Über die Beeinflussung der Ca-Aufnahme in Lipidextrakte aus Mikrosomen und Mitochondrien des Herzens durch Digitoxin

1970

Lipids were isolated by chloroform-methanol extraction from mitochondrial and microsomal fractions of guinea-pig hearts. In the presence of digitoxin (10−9-10−6 g/ml) 15–30% more radioactive Ca was taken up by the lipid extracts than under control conditions, but the total amount of Ca in this phase remained unchanged. Thus, digitoxin produced an increase in the specific activity of the lipid-bound Ca which may be explained by an increased exchangeability of this Ca fraction. This effect of digitoxin might result in an improved availability of the lipid-bound Ca for Ca-dependent functions (e.g. contraction) of the heart muscle cell.

Pharmacologymedicine.medical_specialtyContraction (grammar)DigitoxinChemistryCell Biologycarbohydrates (lipids)Cellular and Molecular NeuroscienceEndocrinologyInternal medicinepolycyclic compoundsmedicineMicrosomeMolecular Medicinelipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)Heart Muscle CellSpecific activityMolecular Biologymedicine.drugExperientia
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Effects ofThymus species extracts on rat duodenum isolated smooth muscle contraction

1989

The diethylether, ethylacetate and butanolic extracts from Thymus webbianus and Thymus leptophyllus were tested for spasmolytic activity. Pre-incubation of the isolated rat duodenum with these extracts for 10 min produced a concentration-dependent inhibition of acetylcholine-induced contractions. This effect was at least ten times greater with the apolar extracts than with the polar extracts.

Pharmacologymedicine.medical_specialtyEndocrinologySmooth muscleInternal medicinemedicineRat Duodenumlipids (amino acids peptides and proteins)Smooth muscle contractionBiologyPhytotherapy Research
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Relaxant effects of antidepressants on human isolated mesenteric arteries

1999

Aims The therapeutic action of tricyclic agents may be accompanied by unwanted effects on the cardiovascular system. The evidence for the effects on vascular and nonvascular smooth muscle comes from animal studies. Whether these studies can be extrapolated to human vessels remains to be determined. Therefore, the present study was designed to investigate the influence of amitriptyline, nortriptyline and sertraline on the contractile responses of human isolated mesenteric arteries to electrical field stimulation, noradrenaline and potassium chloride. Methods Arterial segments (lumen diameter 0.8–1.2 mm) were obtained from portions of the human omentum during the course of 41 abdominal operat…

Pharmacologymedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industryVasodilationSmooth muscle contractionMuscle relaxationEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structureInternal medicineCirculatory systemmedicinePharmacology (medical)AmitriptylineNortriptylinemedicine.symptombusinessMesenteric arteriesmedicine.drugMuscle contractionBritish Journal of Clinical Pharmacology
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Effets de la pratique de l'escalade sur la contractilité musculaire

1992

Resume Les caracteristiques biomecaniques des flechisseurs du coude et du poignet de sujets grimpeurs sont comparees a celles de sujets non pratiquants. Les mesures sont realisees a l'aide d'un ergometre isocinetique sur une plage de vitesses angulaires s'etalant de 120°·s −1 en excentrique a 360°·s −1 en concentrique. Les relations couple maximum/vitesse angulaire montrent que les sujets grimpeurs developpent un couple maximum plus eleve que les sujets temoins sur une plage de vitesse angulaire allant de 60°·s −1 en excentrique a 120°·s −1 en concentrique. Les differences entre les valeurs de couple maximum excentrique et concentrique sont identiques pour les deux groupes de sujets. Lors d…

PhilosophyOrthopedics and Sports MedicineFlexor musclesHumanitiesScience & Sports
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In vivo investigations on microcirculatory disturbances induced by crenated erythrocytes following norepinephrine application

1974

Using a special apparatus for high resolution cinephotomicrography, which allows simultaneous observation and recording of microcirculatory changes, alterations in blood flow patterns and in red cell shape during norepinephrine acting have been studied. Under physiological conditions, and during slowing of capillary blood flow due to gradual removing of 20–25% of the circulating blood volume, the normal red cells are extremely deformable while passing through mesenteric capillaries. After application of norepinephrine a general arteriolar constrictive response in the bowel wall occurs, causing a further slowing of the capillary blood flow in the mesentery. Under these circumstances the eryt…

PhotomicrographyErythrocytesBlood volumeFatty Acids NonesterifiedBiologyMicrocirculationCrenationNorepinephrine (medication)NorepinephrineCyclic AMPmedicineAnimalsMesenteryMesenteryAbdominal MusclesRed CellMicrocirculationGeneral MedicineAnatomyBlood flowmedicine.anatomical_structureShock (circulatory)BiophysicsRabbitsmedicine.symptomBlood Flow Velocitymedicine.drugResearch in Experimental Medicine
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Effect of angular velocity on soleus and medial gastrocnemius H-reflex during maximal concentric and eccentric muscle contraction.

2009

At rest, the H-reflex is lower during lengthening than shortening actions. During passive lengthening, both soleus (SOL) and medial gastrocnemius (MG) H-reflex amplitudes decrease with increasing angular velocity. This study was designed to investigate whether H-reflex amplitude is affected by angular velocity during concentric and eccentric maximal voluntary contraction (MVC). Experiments were performed on nine healthy men. At a constant angular velocity of 60 degrees /s and 20 degrees /s, maximal H-reflex and M-wave potentials were evoked at rest (i.e., H(max) and M(max), respectively) and during concentric and eccentric MVC (i.e., H(sup) and M(sup), respectively). Regardless of the muscl…

PhysicsAdultMaleMovementBiophysicsNeuroscience (miscellaneous)Medial gastrocnemiusAngular velocityNeural InhibitionAnatomyConcentricElectric StimulationH-ReflexEccentric muscle contractionVoluntary contractionEccentricHumansNeurology (clinical)H-reflexConstant angular velocityMuscle SkeletalAnkle JointMuscle ContractionJournal of electromyography and kinesiology : official journal of the International Society of Electrophysiological Kinesiology
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Mechanical and electrical behavior of human muscle during maximal concentric and eccentric contractions

1974

The force-velocity relationships of human muscle (e.g., Asmussen, Hansen, and Lammert, 1965; Komi, 1973a) characterize the main mechanical differences in concentric and eccentric work. Some information also has been reported on the interrelationship between neural input and mechanical output during submaximal concentric and eccentric contractions. The slope of the regression line representing the relationship between IEMG and muscle tension is greater when muscle shortens at a constant velocity than when it lengthens at the same velocity (Bigland and Lippold, 1954). When recordings were made with a greater number of velocities, then a family of curves was obtained, a result which emphasizes…

PhysicsHuman muscleTension (physics)Muscle tensionFamily of curvesWork (physics)EccentricEccentric contractionsMechanicsConcentric
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The metalloproteinase-disintegrin ADAM10 is exclusively expressed by type I muscle fibers.

2008

ADAM10 (Kuzbanian) is a member of a recently discovered family of membrane-anchored metalloproteinases with a complex and conserved domain structure. In part, these metalloproteinases have been implicated in muscle formation. Herein the expression pattern of ADAM10 in human skeletal muscle was studied. ADAM10 was found to be present in human myoblasts and to be exclusively expressed in type I fibers, suggesting that it may be critical in muscle fiber differentiation.

PhysiologyADAM10Matrix metalloproteinaseCellular and Molecular NeuroscienceADAM10 ProteinPhysiology (medical)DisintegrinmedicineMyocyteHumansAdenosine TriphosphatasesMetalloproteinasebiologyMyosin Heavy ChainsMyogenesisChemistrySkeletal muscleMembrane ProteinsCell biologyADAM Proteinsmedicine.anatomical_structureMuscle Fibers Slow-TwitchBiochemistrybiology.proteinNeurology (clinical)Amyloid Precursor Protein SecretasesITGA7Musclenerve
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6-phosphofructo-2-kinase/fructose-2,6-bisphosphatase from frog skeletal muscle: purification, kinetics and immunological properties.

1993

Fructose 2,6-bisphosphate is the most potent activator of 6-phosphofructo-1-kinase, a key regulatory enzyme of glycolysis in animal tissues. This study was prompted by the finding that the content of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate in frog skeletal muscle was dramatically increased at the initiation of exercise and was closely correlated with the glycolytic flux during exercise. 6-phosphofructo-2-kinase/fructose-2,6-bisphosphatase, the enzyme system catalyzing the synthesis and degradation of fructose 2,6-bisphosphate, was purified from frog (Rana esculenta) skeletal muscle and its properties were compared with those of the rat muscle type enzyme expressed in Escherichia coli using recombinant DN…

PhysiologyPhosphofructokinase-2BiologyBiochemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundEndocrinologymedicineFructosediphosphatesAnimalsGlycolysisPhosphorylationEcology Evolution Behavior and Systematicschemistry.chemical_classificationMolecular massImmunochemistryMusclesPhosphotransferasesSkeletal muscleRana esculentaFructoseHydrogen-Ion ConcentrationMolecular WeightKineticsmedicine.anatomical_structureEnzymechemistryFructose 26-bisphosphateBiochemistryGRENOUILLEAnimal Science and ZoologyPhosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinaseProtein KinasesJournal of comparative physiology. B, Biochemical, systemic, and environmental physiology
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Midbrain vs. pontine medial longitudinal fasciculus lesions: The utilization of masseter and blink reflexes

1991

Masseter (MR) and blink reflexes (BL) were investigated in 51 patients with internuclear ophthalmoplegia (INO) due to multiple sclerosis (28) and lacunar infarction (23). The MR was abnormal in 20 of 23 cases with bilateral INO and in 21 of 28 with unilateral INO. The R1 component of the BL (BL-R1) was abnormal in 7 of 23 patients with bilateral INO and 10 of 28 with unilateral INO. Combined MR and BL-R1 changes occurred in 8 of 28 cases with unilateral INO and 7 of 23 with bilateral INO. The findings provide evidence for a rostral/caudal localization of lesions within the medial longitudinal fasciculus causing INO on the basis of MR and BL-R1 abnormalities. An abnormality limited to MR sug…

Physiologybusiness.industryCerebral infarctionInternuclear ophthalmoplegiaAnatomymedicine.diseaseMedial longitudinal fasciculusPonsMasseter muscleMidbrainCellular and Molecular NeurosciencePhysiology (medical)MedicineNeurology (clinical)Corneal reflexbusinessJaw jerk reflexMuscle & Nerve
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