S
Suzanne M. Schneider
Researcher at University of New Mexico
Publications - 85
Citations - 2806
Suzanne M. Schneider is an academic researcher from University of New Mexico. The author has contributed to research in topics: Heat acclimation & Bed rest. The author has an hindex of 30, co-authored 85 publications receiving 2492 citations. Previous affiliations of Suzanne M. Schneider include Loyola University Chicago.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Cardiac atrophy in women following bed rest
Todd Dorfman,Benjamin D. Levine,Tommy Tillery,Ronald M Peshock,Jeffrey L. Hastings,Suzanne M. Schneider,Brandon R. Macias,Gianni Biolo,Alan R. Hargens +8 more
TL;DR: Both chronic microgravity exposure and long-duration bed rest induce cardiac atrophy, which leads to reduced standing stroke volume and orthostatic intolerance, however, despite the fact that women...
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Regulatory Coordination between Two Major Intracellular Homeostatic Systems HEAT SHOCK RESPONSE AND AUTOPHAGY
Karol Dokladny,Micah Zuhl,Michael A. Mandell,Dhruva Bhattacharya,Suzanne M. Schneider,Vojo Deretic,Pope L. Moseley +6 more
TL;DR: It is found for the first time that heat shock response controls autophagy thus connecting and coordinating the two extreme ends of the homeostatic systems in the eukaryotic cell.
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Space physiology VI: exercise, artificial gravity, and countermeasure development for prolonged space flight
TL;DR: Inexpensive methods to induce artificial gravity alone and exercise during artificial gravity (for example, by short-arm centrifuge or exercise within lower body negative pressure) should be developed further and evaluated as multi-system countermeasures.
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Exercise regulation of intestinal tight junction proteins
Micah Zuhl,Suzanne M. Schneider,Katherine Lanphere,Carole A. Conn,Karol Dokladny,Pope L. Moseley +5 more
TL;DR: The function and physiology of tight junction regulation is explained, the effects of prolonged and high-intensity exercise on tight junction permeability leading to gastrointestinal distress are discussed and agents that may increase or decrease tight junction integrity during exercise are reviewed.
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Mind-body Practices for Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
TL;DR: In general, mind-body practices were found to be a viable intervention to improve the constellation of PTSD symptoms such as intrusive memories, avoidance, and increased emotional arousal.