Experimental arrest of cerebral blood flow in human subjects: the red wing studies revisited

scientific article published on January 2011

Experimental arrest of cerebral blood flow in human subjects: the red wing studies revisited is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1353/PBM.2011.0018
P932PMC publication ID3848716
P698PubMed publication ID21532128

P50authorEllen Wright ClaytonQ16902110
P2093author name stringDavid Robertson
Brian A Smith
P2860cites workPrevention of the pathophysiologic effects of acceleration in humans: fundamentals and historic perspectivesQ47324656
P433issue2
P921main subjecthuman subject research projectQ1331083
cerebral blood flowQ5064096
P304page(s)121-131
P577publication date2011-01-01
P1433published inPerspectives in Biology and MedicineQ3669366
P1476titleExperimental arrest of cerebral blood flow in human subjects: the red wing studies revisited
P478volume54

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q47657786A comparison of static and dynamic cerebral autoregulation during mild whole-body cold stress in individuals with and without cervical spinal cord injury: a pilot study.
Q38542457Cerebral Vascular Control and Metabolism in Heat Stress
Q39026453Commentary: Randomized trials of controversial social interventions: slow progress in 50 years
Q38176342Integrative regulation of human brain blood flow
Q37150169Neurogenic orthostatic hypotension: pathophysiology, evaluation, and management.
Q33166781Vasovagal Syncope: Hypothesis Focusing on Its Being a Clinical Feature Unique to Humans
Q33127637Vasovagal syncope in humans and protective reactions in animals