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  • PHYSICS, ATOMIC, MOLECULAR, AND NUCLEAR  (16)
  • Aerospace Medicine  (13)
  • 1
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: No abstract available
    Keywords: Aerospace Medicine
    Type: Journal of gravitational physiology : a journal of the International Society for Gravitational Physiology (ISSN 1077-9248); Volume 7; 1; S63
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: The effects of gravitational unloading with or without intact neural activity and/or tension development on myosin heavy chain (MHC) composition, cross-sectional area (CSA), number of myonuclei, and myonuclear domain (cytoplasmic volume per myonucleus ratio) in single fibers of both slow and fast muscles of rat hindlimbs are reviewed briefly. The atrophic response to unloading is generally graded as follows: slow extensors 〉 fast extensors 〉 fast flexors. Reduction of CSA is usually greater in the most predominant fiber type of that muscle. The percentage of fibers expressing fast MHC isoforms increases in unloaded slow but not fast muscles. Myonuclear number per mm of fiber length and myonuclear domain is decreased in the fibers of the unloaded predominantly slow soleus muscle, but not in the predominantly fast plantaris. Decreases in myonuclear number and domain, however, are observed in plantaris fibers when tenotomy, denervation, or both are combined with hindlimb unloading. All of these results are consistent with the view that a major factor for fiber atrophy is an inhibition or reduction of loading of the hindlimbs. These data also indicate that predominantly slow muscles are more responsive to unloading than predominantly fast muscles. c2002 COSPAR. Published by Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
    Keywords: Aerospace Medicine
    Type: Advances in space research : the official journal of the Committee on Space Research (COSPAR); Volume 30; 4; 777-81
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: Changes in the expression of heat shock protein 72 (HSP72) in response to atrophic-inducing perturbations of muscle involving chronic mechanical unloading and denervation were determined. Adult male Wistar rats were assigned randomly to a sedentary cage control (CON), hind limb unloading (HU, via tail suspension), HU plus tenotomy (HU + TEN), HU plus denervation (HU + DEN), or HU + TEN + DEN group. Tenotomy and DEN involved cutting the Achilles tendon and removing a segment of the sciatic nerve, respectively. After 5 days, HSP72 levels in the soleus of the HU + DEN and HU + TEN + DEN groups were 42 (P 〈 0.05) and 53% (P 〈 0.01) less than CON, respectively. Soleus weight decreased in both groups. Heat shock protein 72 levels in the plantaris of the HU + TEN, HU + DEN, and HU + TEN + DEN groups were 31, 25, and 30% lower than CON, respectively (P 〈 0.05). Plantaris weight decreased in the HU + DEN and HU + TEN + DEN, but not in the HU + TEN group. Hind limb unloading alone had little effect on the HSP72 level in either muscle. Reduced levels of HSP72 were associated with a decreased soleus (r=0.62, P 〈 0.01) and plantaris (r=0.78, P 〈 0.001) weight. These results indicate that the levels of HSP72 in both a slow and a fast rat plantarflexor are responsive to a chronic decrease in the levels of loading and/or activation and suggest that the neuromuscular activity level and the presence of innervation of a muscle are important factors that induce HSP72 expression.
    Keywords: Aerospace Medicine
    Type: Acta physiologica Scandinavica (ISSN 0001-6772); Volume 172; 2; 123-30
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2011-08-16
    Description: Ground state dissociation energies for diatomic halogens from vibrational spacings near dissociation limit
    Keywords: PHYSICS, ATOMIC, MOLECULAR, AND NUCLEAR
    Type: ERATOMIC FORCES FROM SPECTRAL DATA, AND UTIL. OF POTENTIAL CURVES IN SPECTRY., SCATTERING AND KINET. 15 JAN. 1971 (SEE N71-19737 09-24) 09-24/
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2011-08-16
    Description: Permeability of one dimensional potential barriers in chemical reactions
    Keywords: PHYSICS, ATOMIC, MOLECULAR, AND NUCLEAR
    Type: ERATOMIC FORCES FROM SPECTRAL DATA, AND UTIL. OF POTENTIAL CURVES IN SPECTRY., SCATTERING AND KINET. 15 JAN. 1971 (SEE N71-19737 09-24) 09-24/
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2011-08-16
    Description: Approximation of scattering resonance energies and widths of ground state of molecular hydrogen from energy dependence of atomic collisional time delay functions
    Keywords: PHYSICS, ATOMIC, MOLECULAR, AND NUCLEAR
    Type: ERATOMIC FORCES FROM SPECTRAL DATA, AND UTIL. OF POTENTIAL CURVES IN SPECTRY., SCATTERING AND KINET. 15 JAN. 1971 (SEE N71-19737 09-24) 09-24/
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2011-08-16
    Description: Dissociation energies and long range potentials of diatomic halogen molecules from vibrational spacings
    Keywords: PHYSICS, ATOMIC, MOLECULAR, AND NUCLEAR
    Type: ERATOMIC FORCES FROM SPECTRAL DATA, AND UTIL. OF POTENTIAL CURVES IN SPECTRY., SCATTERING AND KINET. 15 JAN. 1971 (SEE N71-19737 09-24) 09-24/
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2011-08-16
    Description: Expectation values and kinetic energy for vibrational-rotational levels of ground states of H2, HD, and D2
    Keywords: PHYSICS, ATOMIC, MOLECULAR, AND NUCLEAR
    Type: ERATOMIC FORCES FROM SPECTRAL DATA, AND UTIL. OF POTENTIAL CURVES IN SPECTRY., SCATTERING AND KINET. 15 JAN. 1971 (SEE N71-19737 09-24) 09-24/
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2011-08-16
    Description: Recombination of iodine atoms in dilute argon solutions studied by flash photolysis
    Keywords: PHYSICS, ATOMIC, MOLECULAR, AND NUCLEAR
    Type: WISCONSIN UNIV. INTERATOMIC FORCES FROM SPECTRAL DATA, AND UTIL. OF POTENTIAL CURVES IN SPECTRY., SCATTERING AND KINET. 15 JAN. 1971 (SEE N71-19737 09-24)
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2011-08-24
    Description: BACKGROUND: Spaceflights of short duration (approximately 2 wk) result in adaptations in the size and/or metabolic properties of a select population of motoneurons located in the lumbosacral region of the rat spinal cord. A decrease in succinate dehydrogenase (SDH, an oxidative marker enzyme) activity of moderately sized (500-800 microm2) motoneurons in the retrodorsolateral region of the spinal cord (L6) has been observed after a 14-d flight. HYPOTHESIS: Our hypothesis was that exposure to short-term hypergravity would result in adaptations in the opposite direction, reflecting a continuum of morphological and biochemical responses in the spinal motoneurons from zero gravity to hypergravity. METHODS: Young, male rats were centrifuged at either 1.5 or 2.0 G for 2 wk. The size and SDH activity of a population of motoneurons in the retrodorsolateral region of the spinal cord (L5) were determined and compared with age-matched rats maintained at 1.0 G. The absolute and relative (to body weight) masses of the soleus, gastrocnemius, adductor longus and tibialis anterior muscles were compared among the three groups. RESULTS: There were no effects of either hypergravity intervention on the motoneuron properties. Rats maintained under hypergravity conditions gained less body mass than rats kept at 1.0 G. For the 1.5 and 2.0 G groups, the muscle absolute mass was smaller and relative mass similar to that observed in the 1.0 G rats, except for the adductor longus. The adductor longus absolute mass was similar to and the relative mass larger in both hypergravity groups than in the 1.0 G group. CONCLUSIONS: Our hypothesis was rejected. The findings suggest that rat motoneurons are more responsive to short-term chronic exposure to spaceflight than to hypergravity conditions.
    Keywords: Aerospace Medicine
    Type: Aviation, space, and environmental medicine (ISSN 0095-6562); Volume 72; 12; 1107-12
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