Sarah A. Galley, Ph.D.
Affiliations: | 2006 | Michigan Technological University, USA |
Area:
Mechanical Engineering, Biomedical EngineeringGoogle:
"Sarah Galley"Parents
Sign in to add mentorSeth W. Donahue | grad student | 2006 | Michigan Technological University | |
(The role of fluid flow in targeted remodeling.) |
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Publications
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Terauchi M, Li JY, Bedi B, et al. (2009) T lymphocytes amplify the anabolic activity of parathyroid hormone through Wnt10b signaling. Cell Metabolism. 10: 229-40 |
Gao Y, Wu X, Terauchi M, et al. (2008) T cells potentiate PTH-induced cortical bone loss through CD40L signaling. Cell Metabolism. 8: 132-45 |
Donahue SW, Galley SA. (2006) Microdamage in bone: implications for fracture, repair, remodeling, and adaptation. Critical Reviews in Biomedical Engineering. 34: 215-71 |
Donahue SW, Galley SA, Vaughan MR, et al. (2006) Parathyroid hormone may maintain bone formation in hibernating black bears (Ursus americanus) to prevent disuse osteoporosis. The Journal of Experimental Biology. 209: 1630-8 |
Galley SA, Michalek DJ, Donahue SW. (2006) A fatigue microcrack alters fluid velocities in a computational model of interstitial fluid flow in cortical bone. Journal of Biomechanics. 39: 2026-33 |
Vance J, Galley S, Liu DF, et al. (2005) Mechanical stimulation of MC3T3 osteoblastic cells in a bone tissue-engineering bioreactor enhances prostaglandin E2 release. Tissue Engineering. 11: 1832-9 |
Galley SA, Michalek DJ, Donahue SW. (2005) The presence of a fatigue microcrack alters the fluid flow profile in cortical bone: The effects of microcrack size and orientation Proceedings of the 2005 Summer Bioengineering Conference. 2005: 1248-1249 |