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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 973–984 of 1,131 studies · page 82/95
A2009

From mechanotransduction to extracellular matrix gene expression in fibroblasts

Matthias Chiquet, Laurent Gelman, Roman Lutz, Silke Maier

This 2009 review article explores how connective tissue cells, or fibroblasts, sense and respond to mechanical forces from their environment. Cells attach to the surrounding extracellular matrix via adhesion contacts, w…

fasciaextracellular matrixfibroblast
A+2009

Increased pain from muscle fascia following eccentric exercise: animal and human findings

William Gibson, Lars Arendt-Nielsen, Toru Taguchi, Kazue Mizumura, Thomas Graven-Nielsen

This study, combining animal and human experiments, investigated the source of delayed onset muscle soreness (DOMS) after eccentric exercise. Researchers induced DOMS in participants' tibialis anterior muscle, then inje…

fasciahypertonic salineExperimental pain
A2009

Ascorbate and plasma membrane electron transport—Enzymes vs ef!ux

Darius J R Lane, Alfons Lawen

Cells have systems to move electrons across their outer membrane, a process which uses substances like ascorbate (Vitamin C) from inside the cell. Traditionally, this was thought to happen via enzymes that shuttle elect…

Ascorbate Astrocytes Dehydroascorbate Ferricyanide K562 cells Non-transferrin-bound iron Transplasma membrane electron transport Vitamin C
A2009

The Hard Life of Soft Cells

P A Janmey, J P Winer, M E Murray, Q Wen

This brief review explores how cells function as both mechanical and chemical machines. Cells constantly generate and respond to physical forces within their environment, the extracellular matrix. The stiffness of this…

fasciamechanotransductionsubstrate stiffness
A2009

Mechanotransduction at a distance: mechanically coupling the extracellular matrix with the nucleus

Ning Wang, Jessica D Tytell, Donald E Ingber

In this narrative review, the authors explore how mechanical forces can influence the cell nucleus from a distance. Research has often focused on how external forces are converted into chemical signals at the cell's sur…

fasciaextracellular matrixcytoskeleton
1A+2009

Cannabinoids inhibit fibrogenesis in diffuse systemic sclerosis fibroblasts

E Garcia-Gonzalez, E Selvi, E Balistreri, S Lorenzini, R Maggio, M-R Natale, P-L Capecchi, P-E Lazzerini, M Bardelli, F…

Systemic sclerosis is a disease characterized by excessive fibrosis, or scarring, in tissues. In this laboratory study, researchers investigated the effect of a synthetic cannabinoid on fibroblasts (connective tissue ce…

CannabinoidsSystemic sclerosisFibrogenesis
A2009

Communicating About Fascia: History, Pitfalls, and Recommendations

Helene M Langevin, Peter A Huijing

In this commentary, the authors discuss how the word "fascia" can be ambiguous and lead to misunderstandings, as it can refer to anything from loose to dense connective tissue. This lack of precision can hinder communic…

fasciaConnective tissueSubcutaneous tissue
1A+2008

Charge transfer in the living matrix

James L Oschman

This theoretical paper describes the "living matrix" as the body's continuous network of connective tissue. The author proposes that this matrix functions as a body-wide reservoir of electrical charge, which may be cruc…

chronic inflammationimmune systemwound repair
A2008

Differential effects of hyaluronan and its fragments on fibroblasts: Relation to wound healing

Maha David-Raoudi, Frederic Tranchepain, Brigitte Deschrevel, Jean-Claude Vincent, Patrick Bogdanowicz, Karim Boumedien…

This lab study investigated how hyaluronan (HA) of different molecular sizes affects human fibroblast cells, which are key to wound healing. Researchers exposed fibroblasts to native HA and two smaller fragments. All th…

hyaluronanfasciawound healing
B2008

Low Molecular Weight Hyaluronic Acid Increases the Self-Defense of Skin Epithelium by Induction of !-Defensin 2 via TLR2 and TLR4

Silvia Gariboldi, Marco Palazzo, Laura Zanobbio, Silvia Selleri, Michele Sommariva, Lucia Sfondrini, Stefano Cavicchini…

Hyaluronic acid (HA), a key component of the extracellular matrix, breaks down into smaller fragments (LMW-HA) during injury or inflammation. This study investigated how these fragments affect skin cells. The researcher…

HA
A2008

Vitamin C Deficiency in a University Teaching Hospital

Runye Gan, Shaun Eintracht, L John Hoffer

This study investigated vitamin C levels in patients at a Canadian teaching hospital. Researchers found that 60% of patients had low levels and 19% were deficient, a much higher rate than in a healthy reference group. F…

supplementationAscorbic acidVitamins.
1A+2008

Tissue Stretch Decreases Soluble TGF-β1 and Type-1 Procollagen in Mouse Subcutaneous Connective Tissue: Evidence From Ex Vivo and In Vivo Models

N A Bouffard, K R Cutroneo, G J Badger, S L White, T R Buttolph, H P Ehrlich, D Stevens-Tuttle, H M Langevin

This study on mice investigated how brief, static stretching affects connective tissue healing after an injury. Researchers used two models: tissue samples cultured outside the body (ex vivo) and live mice with minor su…

fasciaConnective tissueStretching