All Stories

  1. High-Intensity Interval Training Improves Cardiovascular Fitness and Induces Left-Ventricular Hypertrophy During Off-Season
  2. Neuromuscular and biochemical responses of the hamstrings to a Flywheel Russian belt Deadlift in women and men
  3. Football (soccer) match-derived hamstring muscles residual fatigue can be monitored using early rate of torque development
  4. Acute Changes in Hamstring Injury Risk Factors After a Session of High-Volume Maximal Sprinting Speed Efforts in Soccer Players
  5. Individual and region-specific hamstring muscles use during a novel Flywheel Russian belt Deadlift exercise
  6. Hamstrings on focus: Are 72 hours sufficient for recovery after a football (soccer) match? A multidisciplinary approach based on hamstring injury risk factors and histology
  7. Assessment of inter-individual variability in hamstring muscle recovery after a sport-specific sprint training in women and men
  8. Associations between workload, myosin isoforms and performance on professional male basketball. A 4 seasons follow up
  9. The effects of high-velocity hamstring muscle training on injury prevention in football players
  10. Non-Invasive Multiparametric Approach To Determine Sweat–Blood Lactate Bioequivalence
  11. The distribution of different intensity demanding scenarios in elite rink hockey players using an electronic performance tracking system
  12. Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis of Circulating Irisin Levels Following Endurance Training: Results of Continuous and Interval Training
  13. Integrating External and Internal Load for Monitoring Fitness and Fatigue Status in Standard Microcycles in Elite Rink Hockey
  14. DEPORTE Y FUNCIÓN SINÁPTICA NEURONAL: INFLUENCIA DEL EJERCICIO FÍSICO EN LA ATENCIÓN, LA MEMORIA Y EL CÁLCULO EN ALUMNOS ESCOLARES DE SEIS Y SIETE AÑOS
  15. Hamstring Muscle Volume as an Indicator of Sprint Performance
  16. Assessment of muscle fiber adaptation in footballers using a new ELISA assay of myosin isoforms
  17. Sex differences in thigh muscle volumes, sprint performance and mechanical properties in national-level sprinters
  18. Hypertrophic muscle changes and sprint performance enhancement during a sprint-based training macrocycle in national-level sprinters
  19. Fibre-type-specific and Mitochondrial Biomarkers of Muscle Damage after Mountain Races
  20. Initial Maximum Push-Rim Propulsion and Sprint Performance in Elite Wheelchair Rugby Players
  21. Early Functional and Morphological Muscle Adaptations During Short-Term Inertial-Squat Training
  22. Time Course and Association of Functional and Biochemical Markers in Severe Semitendinosus Damage Following Intensive Eccentric Leg Curls: Differences between and within Subjects
  23. Skeletal muscle signaling, metabolism, and performance during sprint exercise in severe acute hypoxia after the ingestion of antioxidants
  24. Metabolic adaptations in skeletal muscle after 84 days of bed rest with and without concurrent flywheel resistance exercise
  25. Advances in Exercise, Physical Activity, and Diabetes Mellitus
  26. Sarcomere Disruptions of Slow Fiber Resulting From Mountain Ultramarathon
  27. Circulating miR-192 and miR-193b Are Markers of Prediabetes and Are Modulated by an Exercise Intervention
  28. Muscle enzyme and fiber type-specific sarcomere protein increases in serum after inertial concentric-eccentric exercise
  29. Upregulation of heart PFK-2/FBPase-2 isozyme in skeletal muscle after persistent contraction
  30. CORRECTION
  31. The changes in the energy metabolism of human muscle induced by training
  32. Fast and slow myosins as markers of muscle injury
  33. Effects of dietary cis and trans unsaturated and saturated fatty acids on the glucose metabolites and enzymes of rats
  34. Phosphorylation-dependent Translocation of Glycogen Synthase to a Novel Structure during Glycogen Resynthesis
  35. Disturbances of the sarcoplasmic reticulum and transverse tubular system in 24-h electrostimulated fast-twitch skeletal muscle
  36. Differences between glycogen biogenesis in fast- and slow-twitch rabbit muscle
  37. Glycogen depletion and resynthesis during 14 days of chronic low-frequency stimulation of rabbit muscle
  38. Changes of skeletal muscle proteases activities during a chronic low-frequency stimulation period
  39. A Novel Role of Neuregulin in Skeletal Muscle
  40. A short training programme for the rapid improvement of both aerobic and anaerobic metabolism
  41. The distribution of rest periods affects performance and adaptations of energy metabolism induced by high-intensity training in human muscle
  42. Contractile Activity Modifies Fru-2,6-P2Metabolism in Rabbit Fast Twitch Skeletal Muscle
  43. GLUT1 glucose transporter gene transcription is repressed by Sp3. Evidence for a regulatory role of Sp3 during myogenesis 1 1Edited by M. Yaniv
  44. Effect of chronic electrostimulation of rabbit skeletal muscle on calmodulin level and protein kinase activity
  45. Loss of the hepatic glycogen-binding subunit (GL) of protein phosphatase 1 underlies deficient glycogen synthesis in insulin-dependent diabetic rats and in adrenalectomized starved rats
  46. Consecuencias del descanso estival sobre el endimiento de jóvenes deportistas
  47. 7-Carbon mimics of D-glucose and L-fucose: Activation by 6R-, and inactivation by 6S, -6C-methylglucose of glycogen synthase: Inhibition of glucokinase and/or glucose-6-phosphatase
  48. The first example of a : Inhibition of glucokinase
  49. Effect of Chronic Alcoholism on Human Muscle Glycogen and Glucose Metabolism
  50. Metabolic adaptations to short-term training are expressed early in submaximal exercise
  51. Electrostimulation of Rabbit Skeletal Muscle Induces Protein Kinase C Translocation from Cytosol to Membranes
  52. Responses of fatigable and fatigue-resistant fibres of rabbit muscle to low-frequency stimulation
  53. Altered glucose 1,6-bisphosphate and fructose 2,6-biphosphate levels in low-frequency stimulated rabbit fast-twitch muscle
  54. Biochemical and histochemical adaptation to sprint training in young athletes
  55. EFFECTS OF ETHANOL AND ACETALDEHYDE ON THE ENZYMES OF GLYCOGEN METABOLISM