3 results match your criteria: "Randwick and University of New South Wales[Affiliation]"
Reg Anesth Pain Med
April 2018
Department of Clinical Medical Sciences School of Medicine CEU San Pablo University and Department of Anesthesiology Madrid-Montepríncipe University Hospital Madrid, Spain Department of Anesthesia Royal Hospital for Women andPrince of Wales and Sydney Children's Hospitals, Randwick and University of New South Wales Kensington, Sydney New South Wales, Australia Laboratory of Surgical NeuroAnatomy Human Anatomy and Embryology Unit Faculty of Medicine Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona and Antón Borja Primary Care Centre Terrassa Health Consortium Rubí, Spain Department of Anesthesiology University General Hospital Valencia University School of Medicine Valencia, Spain Laboratory of Surgical NeuroAnatomy Human Anatomy and Embryology Unit Faculty of Medicine Universitat de Barcelona Barcelona, Spain Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine The University of Queensland and Royal Brisbane and Women's Hospital Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
J Physiol
September 2015
Department of Neurorehabilitation Engineering, Bernstein Focus Neurotechnology Göttingen, Bernstein Center for Computational Neuroscience, University Medical Center Göttingen, Georg-August University, 37075, Göttingen, Germany.
Intramuscular electrodes developed over the past 80 years can record the concurrent activity of only a few motor units active during a muscle contraction. We designed, produced and tested a novel multi-channel intramuscular wire electrode that allows in vivo concurrent recordings of a substantially greater number of motor units than with conventional methods. The electrode has been extensively tested in deep and superficial human muscles.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFRespir Physiol Neurobiol
January 2015
Neuroscience Research Australia, Barker St, Randwick and University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia. Electronic address:
Maximal voluntary protrusion force of the human tongue has not been examined in positions beyond the incisors or at different lung volumes. Tongue force was recorded with the tongue tip at eight positions relative to the incisors (12 and 4mm protrusion, neutral and 4, 12, 16, 24 and 32mm retraction) at functional residual capacity (FRC), total lung capacity (TLC) and residual volume (RV) in 15 healthy subjects. Maximal force occurred between 12mm and 32mm retraction (median 16mm).
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