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Application of Muscle/Nerve Stimulation in Health and Disease

By: Vrbová, Gerta [author.].
Contributor(s): Hudlicka, Olga [author.] | Centofanti, Kristin Schaefer [author.] | SpringerLink (Online service).
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookSeries: Advances in Muscle Research: 4Publisher: Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands, 2008.Description: XI, 118 p. online resource.Content type: text Media type: computer Carrier type: online resourceISBN: 9781402082337.Subject(s): Medicine | Rehabilitation | Rehabilitation medicine | Sports medicine | Physiotherapy | Health | Medicine & Public Health | Rehabilitation | Physiotherapy | Rehabilitation Medicine | Sports Medicine | Popular Science in Medicine and HealthDDC classification: 617.03 Online resources: Click here to access online
Contents:
Plasticity of the Mammalian Motor Unit -- Cardiovascular System: Changes with Exercise Training and Muscle Stimulation -- Electrical Stimulation as a Therapeutic Tool to Restore Motor Function -- Electrical Stimulation for Health, Beauty, Fitness, Sports Training and Rehabilitation.
In: Springer eBooksSummary: The first evidence that electrical changes can cause muscles to contract was p- vided by Galvani (1791). Galvani’s ideas about ‘animal electricity’ were explored during the 19th and 20th century when it was firmly established that ‘electricity’ is one of the most important mechanisms used for communication by the nervous system and muscle. These researches lead to the development of ever more soph- ticated equipment that could either record the electrical changes in nerves and muscles, or elicit functional changes by electrically stimulating these structures. It was indeed the combination of these two methods that elucidated many of the basic principles about the function of the nervous system. Following these exciting findings, it was discovered that electrical stimulation and the functions elicited by it also lead to long-term changes in the properties of nerves and particularly muscles. Recent findings help us to understand the mec- nisms by which activity induced by electrical stimulation can influence mature, fully differentiated cells, in particular muscles, blood vessels and nerves. Electrically elicited activity determines the properties of muscle fibres by activating a sequence of signalling pathways that change the gene expression of the muscle. Thus, elect- cal activity graduated from a simple mechanism that is used to elicit muscle c- traction, to a system that could induce permanent changes in muscles and modify most of its characteristic properties.
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Plasticity of the Mammalian Motor Unit -- Cardiovascular System: Changes with Exercise Training and Muscle Stimulation -- Electrical Stimulation as a Therapeutic Tool to Restore Motor Function -- Electrical Stimulation for Health, Beauty, Fitness, Sports Training and Rehabilitation.

The first evidence that electrical changes can cause muscles to contract was p- vided by Galvani (1791). Galvani’s ideas about ‘animal electricity’ were explored during the 19th and 20th century when it was firmly established that ‘electricity’ is one of the most important mechanisms used for communication by the nervous system and muscle. These researches lead to the development of ever more soph- ticated equipment that could either record the electrical changes in nerves and muscles, or elicit functional changes by electrically stimulating these structures. It was indeed the combination of these two methods that elucidated many of the basic principles about the function of the nervous system. Following these exciting findings, it was discovered that electrical stimulation and the functions elicited by it also lead to long-term changes in the properties of nerves and particularly muscles. Recent findings help us to understand the mec- nisms by which activity induced by electrical stimulation can influence mature, fully differentiated cells, in particular muscles, blood vessels and nerves. Electrically elicited activity determines the properties of muscle fibres by activating a sequence of signalling pathways that change the gene expression of the muscle. Thus, elect- cal activity graduated from a simple mechanism that is used to elicit muscle c- traction, to a system that could induce permanent changes in muscles and modify most of its characteristic properties.

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