Skeletal muscles of old mice demonstrate a profound inability to regenerate fully following damage. Such a failure could be catastrophic to older individuals where muscle loss is already evident. Degeneration and regeneration of muscle fibres following contraction-induced injury in adult and old mice are well characterised, but little is known about the accompanying changes in motor neurons and neuromuscular junctions (NMJs) following this form of injury although defective re-innervation of muscle following contraction-induced damage has been proposed to play a role in sarcopenia. This study visualised and quantified structural changes to motor neurons and NMJs in Extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscles of adult and old Thy1-YFP transgenic ...
SummaryThe cellular basis of age-related tissue deterioration remains largely obscure. The ability t...
A key determinant of geriatric frailty is sarcopenia, the age-associated loss of skeletal muscle mas...
To access publisher's full text version of this article, please click on the hyperlink in Additional...
Motor unit remodelling involving repeated denervation and re-innervation occurs throughout life. The...
While the general understanding of muscle regenerative capacity is that it declines with increasing ...
Neuromuscular junction degeneration is a prominent aspect of sarcopenia, the age associated loss of ...
Human skeletal mass and strength increase from birth until ~35 years of age, thereafter a decline in...
Neurodegeneration has increasingly been considered an important factor in the pathogenesis of sarcop...
Sarcopenia is a loss of muscle mass and function in the elderly that reduces mobility, diminishes qu...
AbstractNatural adult aging is associated with many functional impairments of the human neuromuscula...
Voluntary control of skeletal muscle enables humans to interact with and manipulate the environment....
Several mechanisms contributing to the etiology of sarcopenia (age-related loss of muscle size) have...
Healthy skeletal muscle can regenerate after ischaemic, mechanical, or toxin-induced injury, but age...
© 2018 The Author(s) In older adults, the loss of muscle strength (dynapenia) and the loss of muscle...
The neuromuscular junction is the chemical synapse between motor neurons and skeletal muscle fibers....
SummaryThe cellular basis of age-related tissue deterioration remains largely obscure. The ability t...
A key determinant of geriatric frailty is sarcopenia, the age-associated loss of skeletal muscle mas...
To access publisher's full text version of this article, please click on the hyperlink in Additional...
Motor unit remodelling involving repeated denervation and re-innervation occurs throughout life. The...
While the general understanding of muscle regenerative capacity is that it declines with increasing ...
Neuromuscular junction degeneration is a prominent aspect of sarcopenia, the age associated loss of ...
Human skeletal mass and strength increase from birth until ~35 years of age, thereafter a decline in...
Neurodegeneration has increasingly been considered an important factor in the pathogenesis of sarcop...
Sarcopenia is a loss of muscle mass and function in the elderly that reduces mobility, diminishes qu...
AbstractNatural adult aging is associated with many functional impairments of the human neuromuscula...
Voluntary control of skeletal muscle enables humans to interact with and manipulate the environment....
Several mechanisms contributing to the etiology of sarcopenia (age-related loss of muscle size) have...
Healthy skeletal muscle can regenerate after ischaemic, mechanical, or toxin-induced injury, but age...
© 2018 The Author(s) In older adults, the loss of muscle strength (dynapenia) and the loss of muscle...
The neuromuscular junction is the chemical synapse between motor neurons and skeletal muscle fibers....
SummaryThe cellular basis of age-related tissue deterioration remains largely obscure. The ability t...
A key determinant of geriatric frailty is sarcopenia, the age-associated loss of skeletal muscle mas...
To access publisher's full text version of this article, please click on the hyperlink in Additional...