Trude E. Reich, Ph.D.
Affiliations: | 2005 | Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ, United States |
Area:
Animal Physiology Biology, Molecular BiologyGoogle:
"Trude Reich"Parents
Sign in to add mentorPaul Keim | grad student | 2005 | Northern Arizona University | |
(The locomotor spring: From individual molecule to whole organism.) |
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Publications
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LaStayo PC, Woolf JM, Lewek MD, et al. (2003) Eccentric muscle contractions: their contribution to injury, prevention, rehabilitation, and sport. The Journal of Orthopaedic and Sports Physical Therapy. 33: 557-71 |
Lindstedt SL, Reich TE, Keim P, et al. (2002) Do muscles function as adaptable locomotor springs? The Journal of Experimental Biology. 205: 2211-6 |
Lindstedt SL, LaStayo PC, Reich TE. (2001) When active muscles lengthen: properties and consequences of eccentric contractions. News in Physiological Sciences : An International Journal of Physiology Produced Jointly by the International Union of Physiological Sciences and the American Physiological Society. 16: 256-61 |
Reich TE, Lindstedt SL, LaStayo PC, et al. (2000) Is the spring quality of muscle plastic? American Journal of Physiology. Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology. 278: R1661-6 |
Lastayo PC, Reich TE, Urquhart M, et al. (1999) Chronic eccentric exercise: improvements in muscle strength can occur with little demand for oxygen. The American Journal of Physiology. 276: R611-5 |