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1. Contributions of body fat and effort in the 5K run: age and body weight handicap.

2. Sugar-sweetened beverage consumption and vascular function in Hispanic and non-Hispanic males.

3. The influence of receiving real-time visual feedback on breathing during treadmill running to exhaustion.

4. Examining Contributors to Intent to Continue Exercising in Patients With Cancer in Rehabilitation.

5. Cumulative oral examinations in undergraduate human physiology: process, student perceptions, and outcomes.

8. The 2019 P-MIG Student Survey report and capturing the undergraduate perspective of physiology programming.

9. Advising physiology students: perceptions from the programs.

10. Inhibition of Na + /K + -ATPase and K IR channels abolishes hypoxic hyperaemia in resting but not contracting skeletal muscle of humans.

11. Effects of Single-Dose Dietary Nitrate on Oxygen Consumption During and After Maximal and Submaximal Exercise in Healthy Humans: A Pilot Study.

12. Impaired peripheral vasodilation during graded systemic hypoxia in healthy older adults: role of the sympathoadrenal system.

13. Physical and Psychological Effects of a 12-Session Cancer Rehabilitation Exercise Program.

14. Health-Related Quality of Life Improves Similarly in Patients With and Without Type 2 Diabetes After Cardiac Rehabilitation.

15. Acute ascorbic acid ingestion increases skeletal muscle blood flow and oxygen consumption via local vasodilation during graded handgrip exercise in older adults.

16. Contracting human skeletal muscle maintains the ability to blunt α1 -adrenergic vasoconstriction during KIR channel and Na(+) /K(+) -ATPase inhibition.

18. Intravascular ATP and the regulation of blood flow and oxygen delivery in humans.

19. KIR channel activation contributes to onset and steady-state exercise hyperemia in humans.

20. Reactive hyperemia occurs via activation of inwardly rectifying potassium channels and Na+/K+-ATPase in humans.

21. Mechanisms of rapid vasodilation after a brief contraction in human skeletal muscle.

22. Sources of intravascular ATP during exercise in humans: critical role for skeletal muscle perfusion.

23. Mechanical effects of muscle contraction increase intravascular ATP draining quiescent and active skeletal muscle in humans.

24. ATP-mediated vasodilatation occurs via activation of inwardly rectifying potassium channels in humans.

25. Impaired skeletal muscle blood flow control with advancing age in humans: attenuated ATP release and local vasodilation during erythrocyte deoxygenation.

26. Muscle contraction duration and fibre recruitment influence blood flow and oxygen consumption independent of contractile work during steady-state exercise in humans.

28. Mechanisms of ATP-mediated vasodilation in humans: modest role for nitric oxide and vasodilating prostaglandins.

29. Augmented skeletal muscle hyperaemia during hypoxic exercise in humans is blunted by combined inhibition of nitric oxide and vasodilating prostaglandins.

30. Modulation of postjunctional α-adrenergic vasoconstriction during exercise and exogenous ATP infusions in ageing humans.

31. Combined inhibition of nitric oxide and vasodilating prostaglandins abolishes forearm vasodilatation to systemic hypoxia in healthy humans.

32. Nitric oxide, but not vasodilating prostaglandins, contributes to the improvement of exercise hyperemia via ascorbic acid in healthy older adults.

33. Vasodilatory responsiveness to adenosine triphosphate in ageing humans.

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