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School of Kinesiology

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Greising and colleagues publish in Cell Physiology

The paper sought to evaluate the extent of reactive oxygen species emission and antioxidant buffering capacity of injured muscle.

Headshot of Sarah Greising

Sarah M. Greising, PhD, associate professor in the School of Kinesiology and director of the Skeletal Muscle Plasticity and Regeneration Laboratory (SMPRL), published an article titled “Acute mitochondrial reactive oxygen species emissions drive mitochondrial dysfunction after traumatic muscle injury in male mice” in the American Journal of Physiology – Cell Physiology. The paper was overseen by Jun-Won Heo, PhD, a recent graduate in working with Jarrod Call (University of Georgia), a long-time colleague. The paper sought to evaluate the extent of reactive oxygen species emission and antioxidant buffering capacity of injured muscle, and then evaluated a novel regenerative rehabilitation treatment.