@hannabr.bsky.social
Reposted
You can find the eLife Science Digest for our paper here elifesciences.org/digests/1023... 🚴‍♀️🚴‍♂️
Painkiller exercise
High-intensity exercise relieves pain more than low-intensity activity – but only in males with high fitness levels.
elifesciences.org
August 7, 2025 at 7:50 AM
Reposted
Our paper is now out in @elife.bsky.social: Acute aerobic exercise intensity does not modulate pain potentially due to differences in fitness levels and sex effects: results from a pharmacological fMRI study (with @christianbuchel.bsky.social and Tahmine Fadai). Read it here: doi.org/10.7554/eLif...
Acute aerobic exercise intensity does not modulate pain potentially due to differences in fitness levels and sex effects: results from a pharmacological fMRI study
Exercise intensity alone does not differentially reduce pain, but individual factors like fitness level and sex, along with opioid mechanisms, may influence exercise-induced pain relief.
doi.org
August 7, 2025 at 7:50 AM
Happy to share our new paper, published in STROKE. Fantastic work led by Dr. Silke Wolf. Open Access: doi.org/10.1161/STRO...
Compensatory Proximal Adjustments Characterize Effective Reaching Movements After Stroke | Stroke
BACKGROUND: Understanding of sensorimotor reorganization following a stroke is still incomplete. This study examined how the neuromotor system of well-recovered patients with stroke achieves stable co...
doi.org
June 17, 2025 at 9:51 AM