College of Education and Human Development

School of Kinesiology

Hoffman publishes in Journal of Orthopaedic Research

The paper evaluated the extent to which two different levels of low-intensity vibration training affected musculoskeletal structure and function after a volumetric muscle loss injury.

Daniel Hoffman, PhD, a recent School of Kinesiology graduate and member of the Skeletal Muscle Plasticity and Regeneration Laboratory (SMPRL), led by Sarah Greising, PhD, associate professor in the School of Kinesiology, published an article titled “Low intensity, high frequency vibration training to improve musculoskeletal function in a mouse model of volumetric muscle loss” in the Journal of Orthopaedic Research. Co-authors of the article include lab members and longtime colleague Jarrod Call, PhD. The paper sought to evaluate the extent to which two different levels of low-intensity vibration training affected musculoskeletal structure and function after a volumetric muscle loss injury.