Art
J-GLOBAL ID:201002277309526966   Reference number:10A0660328

An Update of Sports Medicine in Persons with Disabilities-Surviving Skeleton Muscles are Endocrine Organs-

障害者スポーツ医学の最先端 -残存骨格筋は内分泌器官である-
Author (24):
Material:
Volume: 47  Issue:Page: 304-309 (J-STAGE)  Publication year: 2010 
JST Material Number: Z0527A  ISSN: 1881-3526  Document type: Article
Article type: 解説  Country of issue: Japan (JPN)  Language: JAPANESE (JA)
Thesaurus term:
Thesaurus term/Semi thesaurus term
Keywords indexed to the article.
All keywords is available on JDreamIII(charged).
On J-GLOBAL, this item will be available after more than half a year after the record posted. In addtion, medical articles require to login to MyJ-GLOBAL.
,...
Semi thesaurus term:
Thesaurus term/Semi thesaurus term
Keywords indexed to the article.
All keywords is available on JDreamIII(charged).
On J-GLOBAL, this item will be available after more than half a year after the record posted. In addtion, medical articles require to login to MyJ-GLOBAL.

   To see more with JDream III (charged).   {{ this.onShowAbsJLink("http://jdream3.com/lp/jglobal/index.html?docNo=10A0660328&from=J-GLOBAL&jstjournalNo=Z0527A") }}
JST classification (4):
JST classification
Category name(code) classified by JST.
Sport medicine  ,  Preventive medicine in general  ,  Cytokines  ,  Clinical neurology in general 
Reference (8):
  • 1) Tajima F, Ogata H, Mizushima T, Nakamura T, Nagano A : Age Related-medical Issues in Workers with Physical Disabilities. Backhuys Publishers, Leiden, Netherland, 2001 ; pp 201-212
  • 2) 陶山哲夫,田島文博,美津島隆,大川裕行,緒方 甫:車いすマラソン参加対麻痺者と運動習慣のない対麻痺者の血圧と身体計測の比較.臨床スポーツ医学会誌 2002;346:343-346
  • 3) Petersen AM, Pedersen BK : The anti-inflammatory effect of exercise. J Appl Physiol 2005 ; 98 : 1154-1162
  • 4) Pedersen BK, Febbraio MA : Muscle as an endocrine organ : focus on muscle-derived interleukin-6. Physiol Rev 2008 ; 88 : 1379-1406
  • 5) Steenberg A, G van Hall, Osada T, Sacchetti M, Saltin B, Pedersen BK : Production of interleukin-6 in contracting human skeletal muscles can account for the exercise-induced increase in plasma interleukin-6. J Physiol (London) 2000 ; 529 : 237-242
more...

Return to Previous Page