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Dive into the research topics where Emily Louis is active.

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Featured researches published by Emily Louis.


Acta Physiologica | 2007

Influence of concurrent exercise or nutrition countermeasures on thigh and calf muscle size and function during 60 days of bed rest in women

Todd A. Trappe; Nicholas A. Burd; Emily Louis; Gary A. Lee; Scott Trappe

Aim:  The goal of this investigation was to test specific exercise and nutrition countermeasures to lower limb skeletal muscle volume and strength losses during 60 days of simulated weightlessness (6° head‐down‐tilt bed rest).


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2008

Human vastus lateralis and soleus muscles display divergent cellular contractile properties

Nicholas D. Luden; Kiril Minchev; Erik Hayes; Emily Louis; Todd A. Trappe; Scott Trappe

The purpose of this study was to investigate potential differences in single-fiber contractile physiology of fibers with the same myosin heavy chain isoform (MHC I and MHC IIa) originating from different muscles. Vastus lateralis (VL) and soleus biopsies were obtained from 27 recreationally active females (31 +/- 1 yr, 59 +/- 1 kg). A total of 943 single fibers (MHC I = 562; MHC IIa = 301) were isolated and examined for diameter, peak tension (Po), shortening velocity (Vo), and power. The soleus had larger (P < 0.05) fibers (MHC I +18%; MHC IIa +19%), higher MHC I Vo (+13%), and higher MHC I Po (+18%) compared with fibers from the VL. In contrast, fibers from the VL had higher (P < 0.05) specific tension (MHC I +18%; MHC IIa +20%), and MHC I normalized power (+25%) compared with the soleus. There was a trend for MHC IIa soleus fibers to have higher Vo [MHC IIa +13% (P = 0.058)], whereas VL MHC IIa fibers showed a trend for higher normalized power compared with soleus fibers [MHC IIa +33% (P = 0.079)]. No differences in absolute power were detected between muscles. These data highlight muscle-specific differences in single-fiber contractile function that should serve as a scientific basis for consideration when extending observations of skeletal muscle tissue from one muscle of interest to other muscles of origin. This is important when examining skeletal muscle adaptation to physical states such as aging, unloading, and training.


Scandinavian Journal of Medicine & Science in Sports | 2012

Skeletal muscle plasticity with marathon training in novice runners

Nicholas D. Luden; Erik Hayes; Kiril Minchev; Emily Louis; Ulrika Raue; T. Conley; Scott Trappe

The purpose of this study was to investigate leg muscle adaptation in runners preparing for their first marathon. Soleus and vastus lateralis (VL) biopsies were obtained from six recreational runners (23 ± 1 years, 61 ± 3 kg) before (T1), after 13 weeks of run training (T2), and after 3 weeks of taper and marathon (T3). Single muscle fiber size, contractile function (strength, speed, and power) and oxidative enzyme activity [citrate synthase (CS)] were measured at all three time points, and fiber type distribution was determined before and after the 16‐week intervention. Training increased VO2max∼9% (P<0.05). All soleus parameters were unchanged. VL MHC I fiber diameter increased (+8%; P<0.05) from T1 to T2. VL MHC I Vo (−12%), MHC I power (−22%) and MHC IIa power (−29%) were reduced from T1 to T2 (P<0.05). No changes in VL single fiber contractile properties were observed from T2 to T3. No change was observed in soleus CS activity, whereas VL CS activity increased 66% (P<0.05). Our observations indicate that modest marathon training elicits very specific skeletal muscle adaptations that likely support the ability to perform 42.2 km of continuous running – further strengthening the existing body of evidence for skeletal muscle specificity.


Journal of Applied Physiology | 2007

Time course of proteolytic, cytokine, and myostatin gene expression after acute exercise in human skeletal muscle

Emily Louis; Ulrika Raue; Yifan Yang; Bozena Jemiolo; Scott Trappe


American Journal of Physiology-regulatory Integrative and Comparative Physiology | 2008

Human soleus single muscle fiber function with exercise or nutrition countermeasures during 60 days of bed rest

Scott Trappe; Andrew Creer; Kiril Minchev; Dustin Slivka; Emily Louis; Nicholas D. Luden; Todd A. Trappe


The FASEB Journal | 2011

Short-term aerobic exercise improves hepatic lipid composition, insulin sensitivity, and circulating HMW adiponectin independent of weight loss in patients with non-alcoholic fatty liver disease

Jacob M. Haus; Thomas P. J. Solomon; Emily Louis; Karen R. Kelly; Aimee Patrick-Melin; Ciaran E. Fealy; Amanda R. Scelsi; Lan Lu; Arthur J. McCullough; Chris A. Flask; John P. Kirwan


The FASEB Journal | 2006

Influence of exercise or nutrition countermeasures during 60 d of bedrest in women: Thigh and calf muscle performance

Emily Louis; Gary Lee; Scott Trappe; Todd A. Trappe


Archive | 2015

muscleexpression after acute exercise in human skeletal Time course of proteolytic, cytokine, and myostatin

Emily Louis; Ulrika Raue; Yifan Yang; Bozena Jemiolo; Scott Trappe; Kenji Uchida; Hironori Tomi; Kazuhiko Higashida; Nobumasa Iwanaka; Takeshi Hashimoto; Yoshimi Oishi; Hayato Tsukamoto; Takumi Yokokawa; Keisuke Hirotsu; Mariko Shimazu; Jamie K. Pugh; Steve H. Faulkner; Andrew P. Jackson; James A. King; Myra A. Nimmo; Milène Catoire; Sander Kersten


Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise | 2009

Gender Comparison Of Vastus Lateralis Basal Myogenic, Proteolytic, Myostatin And Myokine Mrna Levels: 2854

Emily Louis; Nick Luden; Erik Hayes; Ulrika Raue; Bozena Jemiolo; Scott Trappe


The FASEB Journal | 2008

Single muscle fiber gene expression with resistance training in young women

Ulrika Raue; Travis B. Conley; Emily Louis; Kiril Minchev; Bozena Jemiolo; Scott Trappe

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Ulrika Raue

University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences

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