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Research.

Every peer-reviewed study on fascia in one place — graded for strength of evidence, summarised in plain language for clinicians, researchers, and curious readers.

We grade studies from A to 1A+++ using the Fascia Research Database rubric — 1A+++ is the strongest.

Researchers behind the studies
2,806
studies
602
top-graded
2,783
with plain-language summary
Showing 565–576 of 736 studies · page 48/62Since 2015
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  1. A+++
    2017

    The deep fascia and retinacula of the equine forelimb - structure and innervation

    Aleksandra Skalec, Monika Egerbacher

    This study investigated the deep fascia and its reinforcements (retinacula) in the equine forelimb using anatomical dissection and microscopic analysis. The researchers found that horse fascia is structurally similar to…

    equine; fascia; forelimb; innervation; retinaculum; structure
  2. A++
    2017

    Oscillations of ultra-weak photon emission from cancer and noncancer cells stressed by culture medium change and TNF-alfa

    Pierre Madl, Thomas Verwanger, Mark Geppert, Felix Scholkmann

    All cells spontaneously emit a very faint light, known as ultra-weak photon emission (UPE). This study investigated how this light emission changes when different types of human cells, both cancerous and non-cancerous,…

    cancerBiophotonultraweak photon emission
  3. A
    2017

    Spontaneous photon emission: A promising non-invasive diagnostic tool for breast cancer

    Xiaolei Zhao, Jingxiang Pang, Jialei Fu, Yong Wang, Meina Yang, Yanli Liu, Hua Fan, Liewei Zhang, Jinxiang Han

    In this animal study, researchers investigated if ultra-weak light emission from the body, called spontaneous photon emission (SPE), could detect breast cancer. They measured light from the skin of mice with breast canc…

    Breast cancerSpontaneous photon emission (SPE)Preliminary screeningCluster analysisOxidative metabolic
  4. A
    2017

    Adhesive Capsulitis of the Shoulder Joint: Value of Glenohumeral Distance on Magnetic Resonance Arthrography

    Kyu Hong Lee, Hee Jin Park, So Yeon Lee, In Young Youn, Eugene Kim, Jai Hyung Park, Se Jin Park

    Researchers investigated a new way to help diagnose adhesive capsulitis (frozen shoulder) using a specific type of MRI called MR arthrography. They measured the distance between the ball and socket of the shoulder joint…

    Adhesive capsulitisMR imagingShoulderArthrography
  5. B
    2017

    Stretching Reduces Skin Thickness and Improves Subcutaneous Tissue Mobility in a Murine Model of Systemic Sclerosis

    Y Xiong, L Berrueta, K Urso, Sara Olenich, Igla Muskaj, G J Badger, A Aliprantis, R Lafyatis, H M Langevin

    This animal study investigated the effects of stretching on systemic sclerosis, a condition that causes skin inflammation and fibrosis. Using a mouse model of the disease, researchers found that ten minutes of daily str…

    inflammationfibrosisSystemic sclerosisStretchingscleroderma
  6. C
    2017

    X-Rays Effects on Cytoskeleton Mechanics of Healthy and Tumor Cells

    Valeria Panzetta, Marta De Menna, Ida Musella, Mariagabriella Pugliese, Maria Quarto, Paolo A. Netti, Sabato Fusco

    This study investigated how X-ray radiation affects the internal structure, or cytoskeleton, of both healthy cells and tumor cells in a lab setting. Researchers exposed both cell types to different doses of radiation an…

    X-rays; Cytoskeleton; Mechanobiology; Focal Adhesion; Particle Tracking; Microrheology
  7. A+++
    2017

    Electric Nutrition: The Surprising Health and Healing Benefits of Biological Grounding (Earthing)

    Stephen T Sinatra, James L Oschman, Gaétan Chevalier, Drew Sinatra

    This narrative review summarizes research on grounding (earthing), which involves direct physical contact with the Earth's surface. The authors suggest that grounding may provide a form of "electric nutrition" with pote…

    Grounding
  8. A++
    2017

    Measuring ultra-weak photon emission as a non-invasive diagnostic tool for detecting early-stage type 2 diabetes: A step toward personalized medicine

    Mengmeng Sun, Eduard Van Wijk, Slavik Koval, Roeland Van Wijk, Min He, Mei Wang, Thomas Hankemeier, Jan van der Greef

    This study investigated whether ultra-weak photon emission (UPE)—a very faint light emitted by the body—could help identify different subtypes of pre-diabetes. Researchers had practitioners of Traditional Chinese Medici…

    biophotonsTraditional Chinese medicin-based diagnosticsPersonalized medicineType 2 diabetesUltra-weak photon emission (UPE)
  9. A++
    2017

    Spontaneous ultra-weak photon emission in correlation to inflammatory metabolism and oxidative stress in a mouse model of collagen-induced arthritis

    Min He, Eduard van Wijk, Herman van Wietmarschen, Mei Wang, Mengmeng Sun, Slavik Koval, Roeland van Wijk, Thomas Hankem…

    In this animal study, researchers investigated a mouse model of rheumatoid arthritis using two techniques: metabolomics (the analysis of metabolic products) and ultra-weak photon emission (UPE), which measures extremely…

    biophotonsUltra-weak photon emissionSystems biologyCollagen-induced arthritisCorrelation networks
  10. C
    2017

    Concurrent validity of pain scales in individuals with myofascial pain and fibromyalgia

    Scott W Cheatham, Morey J Kolber, Monique Mokha, William J Hanney

    Researchers investigated the reliability of two common tools for measuring pain: the Numeric Pain Rating Scale (NPRS), where patients rate pain from 0 to 10, and the Visual Analog Scale (VAS). The study included 60 part…

    Myofascial painFibromyalgiapain scales
  11. A
    2017

    Don’t Forget the Abdominal Wall: Imaging Spectrum of Abdominal Wall Injuries after Nonpenetrating Trauma

    Shanna A Matalon, Reza Askari, Jonathan D Gates, Ketan Patel, Aaron D Sodickson, Bharti Khurana

    Abdominal wall injuries from non-penetrating trauma are relatively common but are often overlooked in the emergency department. This can happen because more severe, distracting injuries draw attention away, or because t…

    abdominal wallabdominal wall injuriesabdominal wall herniaabdominal wall muscle injurycostochondral rib injury
  12. A++
    2017

    Touch, Tension, and Transduction - The Function and Regulation of Piezo Ion Channels

    Jason Wu, Amanda H Lewis, Jörg Grandl

    This narrative review explores Piezo1 and Piezo2, specialized proteins that act as the body's primary mechanical sensors. These ion channels convert physical forces like touch, tension, and fluid flow into electrical si…

    Mechanotransductionpiezo