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Andreas N. Kavazis

Researcher at Mississippi State University

Publications -  22
Citations -  603

Andreas N. Kavazis is an academic researcher from Mississippi State University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Oxidative stress & Skeletal muscle. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 22 publications receiving 522 citations.

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Mitochondrial-targeted antioxidants protect skeletal muscle against immobilization-induced muscle atrophy

TL;DR: The hypothesis that redox disturbances contribute to immobilization-induced skeletal muscle atrophy and that mitochondria are an important source of ROS production in muscle fibers during prolonged periods of inactivity are supported.
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Exercise protects against doxorubicin-induced markers of autophagy signaling in skeletal muscle

TL;DR: Findings indicate that DOX administration increases the expression of autophagy genes in skeletal muscle, and that exercise can protect skeletal muscle against DOX-induced activation of Autophagy.
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Exercise protects cardiac mitochondria against ischemia-reperfusion injury.

TL;DR: The results reveal that exercise-induced cardioprotection is mediated, at least in part, through mitochondrial adaptations resulting in a mitochondrial phenotype that resists IR-induced damage.
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Doxorubicin-induced markers of myocardial autophagic signaling in sedentary and exercise trained animals.

TL;DR: The results reveal that DOX administration promotes activation of the autophagy/lysosomal system pathway in the heart, and that endurance exercise training can be a cardioprotective intervention against myocardial DOX-induced toxicity.
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Endurance exercise attenuates ventilator-induced diaphragm dysfunction

TL;DR: Compared with sedentary animals, exercise training before MV protected the diaphragm against MV-induced oxidative damage, protease activation, myofiber atrophy, and contractile dysfunction and provided the first evidence that exercise can provide protection against MV -induced diaphRAGm weakness.