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Gary A. Iwamoto

Researcher at University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

Publications -  96
Citations -  4538

Gary A. Iwamoto is an academic researcher from University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center. The author has contributed to research in topics: Reflex & Muscle contraction. The author has an hindex of 28, co-authored 86 publications receiving 4291 citations. Previous affiliations of Gary A. Iwamoto include University of Copenhagen & University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Increased adipose tissue in male and female estrogen receptor-α knockout mice

TL;DR: Evidence is found that estrogen/ERα signaling is critical in female and male WAT; obesity in αERKO males involves a mechanism of reduced energy expenditure rather than increased energy intake.
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The exercise pressor reflex: its cardiovascular effects, afferent mechanisms, and central pathways.

TL;DR: The cardiovascular changes that occur during induced muscular con­ tractions are described and the skeletal muscle afferents and central pathways responsible for this reflex are examined.
OtherDOI

Central Neural Control of Respiration and Circulation During Exercise

TL;DR: The sections in this article are: Respiration, Interactions Between Central Command and Peripheral Feedback, Interaction of Central Command with Cardiorespiratory Reflexes, and Conclusions.
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Effects of capsaicin and bradykinin on afferent fibers with ending in skeletal muscle.

TL;DR: The results suggest that group IV muscle afferents are primarily responsible for causing the reflex increases in cardiovascular function evoked by injecting capsaicin into the arterial supply of the skinned hindlimb of dogs.
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Microinjection of GABA antagonists into the posterior hypothalamus elicits locomotor activity and a cardiorespiratory activation

TL;DR: Results indicate that stimulation of cell bodies alone in the subthalamic locomotor region of the hypothalamus produces all the cardiorespiratory and locomotor responses evoked by electrical stimulation and a GABAergic mechanism exerts a tonic depressive influence over theCardiore Spirited and Locomotor systems by an action in the posterior hypothalamus.