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Kazuki Kasahara

Researcher at Nara Medical University

Publications -  20
Citations -  92

Kazuki Kasahara is an academic researcher from Nara Medical University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Isometric exercise. The author has an hindex of 3, co-authored 3 publications receiving 31 citations.

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Intranasal priming of newborn mice with microbial extracts increases opsonic factors and mature CD11c+ cells in the airway

TL;DR: Results suggest that microbial exposure early in life increases the amounts of SP-A and SP-D and the number of scavenger MØ and also promotes maturation of CD11c+ cells in the airway of newborn mice, which may be involved in airway resistance to S. pneumoniae.
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Comparison between 6-week foam rolling intervention program with and without vibration on rolling and non-rolling sides

TL;DR: The results showed that it is not necessarily needed to perform VFR to increase ROM in the long term but could not change muscle stiffness and strength after FR and VFR interventions on both the rolling and non-rolling sides.
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Comparison between concentric-only, eccentric-only, and concentric–eccentric resistance training of the elbow flexors for their effects on muscle strength and hypertrophy

TL;DR: ECC training increased muscle strength and thickness similarly to CON-ECC training, despite the half training volume, suggesting that concentric contractions contributed little to the training effects.
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Relationship between Eccentric-Exercise-Induced Loss in Muscle Function to Muscle Soreness and Tissue Hardness

TL;DR: The results showed that a decrease in ROM was correlated to an increase in tissue hardness, whereas a increase in muscle strength was correlated in muscle soreness, suggesting that tissue hardness must be controlled for ROM loss, and Muscle soreness must becontrolled for muscle-strength loss.
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Comparison of the Acute Effects of Foam Rolling with High and Low Vibration Frequencies on Eccentrically Damaged Muscle.

TL;DR: It was concluded that it was not necessary to perform VFR with a high frequency to improve muscle soreness and function.