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1 nitric oxide-mediated endothelium-dependent vasomotion.
2 rtrophy, arteriolar hypertrophy, and altered vasomotion.
3 nt vasculopathy on myocardial blood flow and vasomotion.
4 dentified a genetic basis for stress-induced vasomotion.
5 LFPs, supporting that these reflect cerebral vasomotion.
6 CSF mobility can be increased by entraining vasomotion.
7 envelope over gamma-band activity, entrains vasomotion.
8 lumen enlargement, and the lack of reactive vasomotion.
9 ement, plaque regression, and restoration of vasomotion.
10 Insulin also increases arteriolar vasomotion.
11 was puzzled by these dramatic alterations in vasomotion.
12 al smooth muscle cells is a prerequisite for vasomotion.
13 , is known to regulate endothelium-dependent vasomotion.
14 striction, relaxation, and the phenomenon of vasomotion.
15 iolar [Ca2+]i oscillations and corresponding vasomotion.
16 osphorylation of this residue is involved in vasomotion.
17 c oxide (NO), improves endothelium-dependent vasomotion.
18 ed blood viscosity and not abnormal coronary vasomotion.
19 possibility of increasing transport through vasomotion.
20 erum triglyceride levels, indicating lack of vasomotion.
21 wo prominent activity patterns emerged: fast vasomotion across the entire hemisphere and slow vasomot
22 namic multiplexed imaging of cerebrovascular vasomotion activity and the single-cell-level neutrophil
23 ions enhanced CSF inflow, demonstrating that vasomotion acts as a pump driving CSF into the brain.
24 The aim of our study was to assess coronary vasomotion after successful revascularization of chronic
25 CSF) through the brain is driven by cerebral vasomotion, along with respiratory and cardiac forces.
28 rials of BVSs report restoration of arterial vasomotion and elimination of serious complications such
29 ceptor inhibition improves abnormal coronary vasomotion and endothelial dysfunction in patients with
31 e spatiotemporal characteristics of cerebral vasomotion and its relationship to neural activity in an
34 , most likely, endothelium-mediated coronary vasomotion and PET-measured MBF further supports the val
35 es in our understanding of the regulation of vasomotion and vascular remodeling that have led to "rev
36 The effect of long-term smoking on coronary vasomotion and vasodilator capacity in healthy smokers i
37 cold pressor testing (endothelium-dependent vasomotion), and during dipyridamole-induced hyperemia i
38 of the artery, allowing cyclic pulsatility, vasomotion, and adaptative remodelling, by unlocking and
40 in activity and, hence, physiologic coronary vasomotion appears to be influenced by serum ACE levels
42 these findings indicate that alterations in vasomotion are the primary means by which the CBR regula
43 h arteriole radius and Ca(2+) oscillations, "vasomotion," are damped due to neural induced astrocytic
46 study aimed to compare the in-stent/scaffold vasomotion between MgBRS and permanent metallic sirolimu
48 The co-primary endpoints of this study are vasomotion (change in mean lumen diameter before and aft
49 1), and displayed less endothelium-dependent vasomotion (% change segmental lumen volume: 2.1 +/- 0.8
50 ly display an oscillatory phenomenon defined vasomotion, consistent with periodic diameter variations
54 se values calculated from experimental data, vasomotion does inhibit mass transport to tissue in a on
55 n of a foreign body, restriction of vascular vasomotion due to a metal cage, and the risk of late and
58 is or its risk factors, we measured coronary vasomotion during flow-mediated dilation (FMD) in respon
59 oles or pericyte-covered capillaries control vasomotion during neurovascular coupling remains controv
60 nts with atherosclerosis improves epicardial vasomotion during stress, probably by improving endothel
63 whether assessment of endothelium-dependent vasomotion (EDV) with brachial artery ultrasound (BAUS)
64 tate blood volume oscillations and decreased vasomotion following the ablation of type-I nNOS neurons
66 tial in rat isolated cerebral vessels during vasomotion (i.e., rhythmic fluctuations in arterial diam
67 m studies on mouse cortex that modulation of vasomotion, i.e., intrinsic ultra-slow (0.1 Hz) fluctuat
68 Similarly, acetylcholine-mediated epicardial vasomotion improved in segments that initially constrict
70 infra-slow oscillation (ISO) is a source of vasomotion in endogenic (E; 0.005-0.02 Hz), neurogenic (
71 n impairment in endothelium-related coronary vasomotion in overweight individuals to an impairment of
73 dial and microvascular endothelium-dependent vasomotion in patients with atherosclerosis or its risk
76 ive protein (CRP) serum levels, and coronary vasomotion in patients with coronary risk factors but wi
77 abolished abnormal flow-mediated epicardial vasomotion in patients with endothelial dysfunction, in
83 ether Akt can regulate endothelium-dependent vasomotion in vivo using a rabbit femoral artery model o
84 NOCA have identifiable disorders of coronary vasomotion including microvascular and vasospastic angin
85 importance of the frequency and amplitude of vasomotion-induced blood flow oscillations was studied.
86 ons of hypoxia under steady flow conditions, vasomotion-induced flow oscillations can significantly i
87 (iii) tumor blood flow regulation via local vasomotion; (iv) the hemodynamic response to a systemic
88 ncreased degradation of NO by the blood, and vasomotion-like 0.1-0.3 Hz oscillations could also be ge
89 sponse to cold suggests a defect in coronary vasomotion likely located at the level of the coronary e
91 d suggest that age-related reduction of this vasomotion may contribute to impaired clearance of Abeta
92 edema, endothelial dysfunction and impaired vasomotion, microembolization of atherothrombotic debris
93 nitric oxide-mediated, endothelium-dependent vasomotion occur with increasing severity of insulin-res
97 was to investigate the effect of arteriolar vasomotion on oxygen transport from capillary networks.
100 n interaction occurred between L-NNA induced vasomotion oscillations and the AFC response with the gr
103 Our results suggest that abnormal coronary vasomotion plays a pathogenic role in this setting and t
105 sel wall, thereby preventing normal coronary vasomotion, preclude bypass grafting and can provoke lon
106 ics, measured via the blood volume pulse and vasomotion, provide a valuable way of monitoring physiol
107 However, we speculate that abnormal coronary vasomotion (reduced vasodilatation with exercise = reduc
108 safety and efficacy of this new device, with vasomotion restoration and continued degradation over ti
110 motion across the entire hemisphere and slow vasomotion seen as a travelling wave running through the
111 eral pulse signal power (by 36% +/- 29%) and vasomotion signal power (by 50% +/- 26%) occur during pe
112 sion of the study is that a general model of vasomotion that predicts experimental data can be constr
116 The vascular model includes a description of vasomotion, the vascular oscillatory response to transmu
118 , our group demonstrated impaired testicular vasomotion via alpha1-adrenergic receptor activation and
120 onary endothelium-dependent and -independent vasomotion was assessed by intracoronary infusions of ac
125 (SD 0.37), and angiographically discernable vasomotion was documented in 20 (80%) of 25 patients.
130 ared with IS, endothelium-dependent coronary vasomotion was significantly diminished in IR (-56%), as
132 nd 9 control subjects, endothelium-dependent vasomotion was tested with intracoronary ACH (30 microg/
134 cate that heightened sleep pressure promotes vasomotion, whereas slow-wave-rich sleep amplifies respi
135 hanisms underlying endothelium-mediated skin vasomotion, which might be altered in the presence of me
136 illaries, pausing is presumed to result from vasomotion-which has been postulated as necessary for th
137 endothelial cells disrupt normal control of vasomotion, with a reduction of effective nitric oxide a