Publication | Closed Access
Cell populations in skeletal muscle after regeneration
30
Citations
6
References
1970
Year
RegenerationMuscle FunctionAnatomyComparative AnatomyOrgan RegenerationMuscle FibreCell SpecializationCellular PhysiologyRegenerative MedicineSoft Tissue InjuryMuscle PhysiologyKinesiologyMuscle InjuryApplied AnatomySkeletal MuscleBiomechanicsApplied PhysiologyHealth SciencesMusculoskeletal TissueSkeletal BiologyMuscle RegenerationNeuromuscular PhysiologyLimb RestorationCell BiologyPhysiologyMedicine
ABSTRACT Much is known of the processes involved in the regeneration of skeletal muscle after injury. Yet in most accounts, the results are expressed in general or relative terms. Thus Adams, Denny-Brown & Pearson (1962) state that provided the architecture of the muscle survives, the reconstruction of ‘considerable lengths’ of muscle fibre is feasible. Wright (1963) makes a plea for the applica-tion of quantitation, with the choice of ‘some muscle that is sufficiently small for counting and measuring techniques to be reasonably applicable…’ The web of the fruit bat Eidolon helvum (Kerr) contains a number of small muscles which have proved very suitable for the detailed study, in light and electron micro-scopy, of muscle regeneration (Church & Noronha, 1965; Church, Noronha & Allbrook, 1966) (Fig. 1 A – D), and for the quantitation of recovering lesions (Church, 1968).
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