Guest guest Posted November 29, 2004 Report Share Posted November 29, 2004 In anatomy and physiology for nursing school we did several labs about muscles - and we covered this- It was absolutely entrancing.....I am serious. (we used electrical stimulation and dead frogs) Did you know building muscle is more a repair of damage to muscle and that when training for an event timing is important - when you train and for how long and then how long you rest and heal.....it makes a huge difference. Muscle bulks up after you damage it and it repairs itself..... quite a fascinating topic. - In , " " <Matsumura_Clan@m...> wrote: > University of California San Diego > > Muscle Physiology Home Page: > > http://muscle.ucsd.edu/musintro/contractions.shtml > > > > > > I'll tell you where to go! > > Mayo Clinic in Rochester > http://www.mayoclinic.org/rochester > > s Hopkins Medicine > http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 29, 2004 Report Share Posted November 29, 2004 In anatomy and physiology for nursing school we did several labs about muscles - and we covered this- It was absolutely entrancing.....I am serious. (we used electrical stimulation and dead frogs) Did you know building muscle is more a repair of damage to muscle and that when training for an event timing is important - when you train and for how long and then how long you rest and heal.....it makes a huge difference. Muscle bulks up after you damage it and it repairs itself..... quite a fascinating topic. - In , " " <Matsumura_Clan@m...> wrote: > University of California San Diego > > Muscle Physiology Home Page: > > http://muscle.ucsd.edu/musintro/contractions.shtml > > > > > > I'll tell you where to go! > > Mayo Clinic in Rochester > http://www.mayoclinic.org/rochester > > s Hopkins Medicine > http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 30, 2004 Report Share Posted November 30, 2004 Oh the frogs were dead, already, we did not have to pithe them, whew! I do not think I could have. We did not do monkeys, we did have to do cats, skinning them ourself first- that was AWFUL- but the muscles there were amazing- VERY simmilar to huam, we also did some work with sheeps and we had the human cadaver. I have to say the human cadaver was so old- I think our school had been using the same one over 10 years- it was more like using plastic We learned to identify muscles on the cats- we did muscle stimulation on the frogs. - In , a <papola@g...> wrote: > I also found it quite facinating. I could NOT pith my frog. I had > no problems doing what needed to be done on things already dead, but > no way was I harming any creatures. > Did you do monkeys? They are a lot like the human body. > a > > > > On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 01:08:45 -0000, dreamer_plus <dreamer_plus@w...> wrote: > > > > > > In anatomy and physiology for nursing school we did several labs about muscles - and we covered this- It was absolutely entrancing.....I am serious. (we used electrical stimulation and dead frogs) > > Did you know building muscle is more a repair of damage to muscle and that when training for an event timing is important - when you train and for how long and then how long you rest and heal.....it makes a huge difference. Muscle bulks up after you damage it and it repairs itself..... quite a fascinating topic. > > > > - In , " " <Matsumura_Clan@m...> wrote: > > > University of California San Diego > > > > > > Muscle Physiology Home Page: > > > > > > http://muscle.ucsd.edu/musintro/contractions.shtml > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > I'll tell you where to go! > > > > > > Mayo Clinic in Rochester > > > http://www.mayoclinic.org/rochester > > > > > > s Hopkins Medicine > > > http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted November 30, 2004 Report Share Posted November 30, 2004 Oh the frogs were dead, already, we did not have to pithe them, whew! I do not think I could have. We did not do monkeys, we did have to do cats, skinning them ourself first- that was AWFUL- but the muscles there were amazing- VERY simmilar to huam, we also did some work with sheeps and we had the human cadaver. I have to say the human cadaver was so old- I think our school had been using the same one over 10 years- it was more like using plastic We learned to identify muscles on the cats- we did muscle stimulation on the frogs. - In , a <papola@g...> wrote: > I also found it quite facinating. I could NOT pith my frog. I had > no problems doing what needed to be done on things already dead, but > no way was I harming any creatures. > Did you do monkeys? They are a lot like the human body. > a > > > > On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 01:08:45 -0000, dreamer_plus <dreamer_plus@w...> wrote: > > > > > > In anatomy and physiology for nursing school we did several labs about muscles - and we covered this- It was absolutely entrancing.....I am serious. (we used electrical stimulation and dead frogs) > > Did you know building muscle is more a repair of damage to muscle and that when training for an event timing is important - when you train and for how long and then how long you rest and heal.....it makes a huge difference. Muscle bulks up after you damage it and it repairs itself..... quite a fascinating topic. > > > > - In , " " <Matsumura_Clan@m...> wrote: > > > University of California San Diego > > > > > > Muscle Physiology Home Page: > > > > > > http://muscle.ucsd.edu/musintro/contractions.shtml > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > > I'll tell you where to go! > > > > > > Mayo Clinic in Rochester > > > http://www.mayoclinic.org/rochester > > > > > > s Hopkins Medicine > > > http://www.hopkinsmedicine.org > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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