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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 961–972 of 1,131 studies · page 81/95
C2009

Effect of surgical traumas on microcirculation

Visweswar Bhattacharya, Biswajit Mishra, Binayak Mishra, Umesh Kumar, Siddhartha Bhattacharya

This study observed the live effects of common surgical instruments on the tiny blood vessels within fascia. Researchers used tissue flaps from patients' lower legs and examined them under a microscope. They found that…

Microcirculationsurgical traumacautery trauma
B2009

Protein Crosslinking in Assembly and Remodelling of Extracellular Matrices: The Role of Transglutaminases

Daniel Aeschlimann, Vilmos Thomazy

This review article discusses a family of enzymes called transglutaminases, which help build and remodel the body's extracellular matrix by crosslinking proteins. One specific enzyme, tissue transglutaminase (tTG), is p…

Matrix proteinscrosslinkingtransglutaminas
A2009

Mechanotherapy: how physical therapists’ prescription of exercise promotes tissue repair

K M Khan, A Scott

This review article explains the concept of "mechanotherapy," which is the use of prescribed exercise to promote tissue repair. The underlying biological process is called mechanotransduction, where the body's cells sen…

fasciamechanotherapyechanotransduction
A2009

The treatment of Chronic Low Back Pain following the principles of the Fascial Distortion Modell (FDM)

Rainer Engel

This small study investigated the effect of two Fascial Distortion Model (FDM) treatments on 22 people with chronic low back pain. Researchers measured pain, function, flexibility (finger-floor distance), and use of pai…

Manual Therapyfasciaefascial distortion model
A++2009

Imaging of Ultraweak Spontaneous Photon Emission from Human Body Displaying Diurnal Rhythm

Masaki Kobayashi, Daisuke Kikuchi, Hitoshi Okamura

The human body emits an extremely faint light, about 1000 times dimmer than what our naked eyes can detect. This phenomenon, known as ultraweak photon emission, is thought to be linked to the body's energy metabolism. U…

fasciabiophotonsultraweak photons
A2009

Effect of Loading on the Organization of the Collagen Fibril Network in Juvenile Equine Articular Cartilage

Pieter A J Brama, Jaakko Holopainen, P René van Weeren, Elwyn C Firth, Heikki J Helminen, Mika M Hyttinen

In this animal study, researchers investigated how exercise-induced loading affects the collagen network in the articular cartilage of juvenile horses. They compared two sites within a joint: one subjected to high-inten…

cartilage; collagen fibril; loading; parallelism; orientation
A++2009

Oxidative Stress and Neurodegenerative Diseases: A Review of Upstream and Downstream Antioxidant Therapeutic Options

Bayani Uttara, Ajay V Singh, Paolo Zamboni, R T Mahajan

This review article explores the connection between oxidative stress and neurodegenerative diseases like Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. The authors explain that an imbalance of free radicals, which are normal byproducts o…

Oxidative stressROSantioxidants
A+2009

The polyvagal theory: New insights into adaptive reactions of the autonomic nervous system

STEPHEN W PORGES

The Polyvagal Theory describes the autonomic nervous system from an evolutionary perspective. It focuses on a key phylogenetic shift in the vagus nerve that occurred between reptiles and mammals. This change created a l…

vagus nervepolyvagalfighy and flight
A2009

Ultrasound evidence of altered lumbar connective tissue structure in human subjects with chronic low back pain

Helene M Langevin, Debbie Stevens-Tuttle, James R Fox, Gary J Badger, Nicole A Bouffard, Martin H Krag, Junru Wu, Sharo…

Researchers investigated whether structural differences exist in the low back's connective tissues between people with and without chronic low back pain. Using ultrasound, they measured the thickness and echogenicity (h…

fasciaConnective tissuelow back pain
A2009

Relevance of Collagen Piezoelectricity to “Wolff’s Law”: a Critical Review

Andrew C Ahn, Alan J Grodzinsky

This narrative review explores how bone adapts to mechanical stress, a principle known as Wolff's Law. For decades, scientists have investigated how bone cells sense this stress to trigger remodeling. An early theory pr…

fasciacollagenpiezoelectric
B2009

From mechanical loading to collagen synthesis, structural changes and function in human tendon

Michael Kjær, H Langberg, K Heinemeier, M L Bayer, Mette Hansen, L Holm, S Doessing, M Kongsgaard, M R Krogsgaard, S P…

This review article outlines how tendons adapt to mechanical loading from exercise. The research indicates that loading increases the synthesis and turnover of collagen, the protein that gives tendons their strength. Th…

fibroblastphysical trainingMechanical loading
A++2009

Structural Behavior of Highly Concentrated Hyaluronan

Paolo Matteini, Luigi Dei, Emiliano Carretti, Nicola Volpi, Andrea Goti, Roberto Pini

Researchers investigated the behavior of highly concentrated hyaluronan (HA) in a physiological saline solution. They found that HA molecules can organize into stable, larger "superstructures." When heated, the fluid's…

hyaluronanHA structure