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David A Eisner

Showing results (21-30 of 63) with videos related to

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Cell Calcium|November 26, 2010
The effects of hydrogen peroxide on intracellular calcium handling and contractility in the rat ventricular myocyteDavid J Greensmith, David A Eisner, Mahesh Nirmalan
Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology|March 19, 2013
Calcium signaling in heart: multiscale, diverse, rapid, local, and remarkableW Jonathan Lederer, Donald M Bers, David A Eisner
Circulation Research|September 23, 2003
Sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ and heart failure: roles of diastolic leak and Ca2+ transportDonald M Bers, David A Eisner, Hector H Valdivia
Circulation Research|August 29, 2009
How structure, Ca signals, and cellular communications underlie function in precapillary arteriolesLyudmyla Borisova, Susan Wray, David A Eisner, et al.
The Journal of Physiology|November 11, 2024
Calcium flux balance in the heart: how many of the important questions are really unanswered?David A Eisner, David J Greensmith, Andrew W Trafford
Cell Calcium|July 23, 2013
How calcium signals in myocytes and pericytes are integrated across in situ microvascular networks and control microvascular toneLyudmyla Borysova, Susan Wray, David A Eisner, et al.
Cardiovascular Research|November 17, 2007
Sarcoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria in cardiac pathophysiologyDavid Garcia-Dorado, Hans Michael Piper, David A Eisner
Circulation Research|January 31, 2004
Sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium content fluctuation is the key to cardiac alternansMary E Díaz, Stephen C O'Neill, David A Eisner
Circulation Research|November 18, 2006
Increasing ryanodine receptor open probability alone does not produce arrhythmogenic calcium waves: threshold sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium content is requiredLuigi A Venetucci, Andrew W Trafford, David A Eisner
Cardiovascular Research|November 17, 2007
Does nitric oxide modulate cardiac ryanodine receptor function? Implications for excitation-contraction couplingGregory Lim, Luigi Venetucci, David A Eisner, et al.
Pageof 7

Showing results (21-30 of 63) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 7
Cell Calcium|November 26, 2010
The effects of hydrogen peroxide on intracellular calcium handling and contractility in the rat ventricular myocyteDavid J Greensmith, David A Eisner, Mahesh Nirmalan
Journal of Molecular and Cellular Cardiology|March 19, 2013
Calcium signaling in heart: multiscale, diverse, rapid, local, and remarkableW Jonathan Lederer, Donald M Bers, David A Eisner
Circulation Research|September 23, 2003
Sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ and heart failure: roles of diastolic leak and Ca2+ transportDonald M Bers, David A Eisner, Hector H Valdivia
Circulation Research|August 29, 2009
How structure, Ca signals, and cellular communications underlie function in precapillary arteriolesLyudmyla Borisova, Susan Wray, David A Eisner, et al.
The Journal of Physiology|November 11, 2024
Calcium flux balance in the heart: how many of the important questions are really unanswered?David A Eisner, David J Greensmith, Andrew W Trafford
Cell Calcium|July 23, 2013
How calcium signals in myocytes and pericytes are integrated across in situ microvascular networks and control microvascular toneLyudmyla Borysova, Susan Wray, David A Eisner, et al.
Cardiovascular Research|November 17, 2007
Sarcoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria in cardiac pathophysiologyDavid Garcia-Dorado, Hans Michael Piper, David A Eisner
Circulation Research|January 31, 2004
Sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium content fluctuation is the key to cardiac alternansMary E Díaz, Stephen C O'Neill, David A Eisner
Circulation Research|November 18, 2006
Increasing ryanodine receptor open probability alone does not produce arrhythmogenic calcium waves: threshold sarcoplasmic reticulum calcium content is requiredLuigi A Venetucci, Andrew W Trafford, David A Eisner
Cardiovascular Research|November 17, 2007
Does nitric oxide modulate cardiac ryanodine receptor function? Implications for excitation-contraction couplingGregory Lim, Luigi Venetucci, David A Eisner, et al.
Pageof 7