Dr. Thomas Scott Bowen

Profile

Academic positionAssociate Professor, Senior Lecturer, Reader
Research fieldsAnatomy and Physiology
Keywordsskeletal muscle, diaphragm, exercise training, heart failure, preventive cardiology

Current contact address

CountryUnited Kingdom
CityLeeds
InstitutionUniversity of Leeds
InstituteSchool of Biomedical Sciences
Homepagehttps://www.fbs.leeds.ac.uk/staff/profile.php?tag=Bowen_TS

Host during sponsorship

Dr. Volker AdamsHerzzentrum, Klinik für Innere Medizin/Kardiologie, Universität Leipzig, Leipzig
Start of initial sponsorship01/01/2013

Programme(s)

2012Humboldt Research Fellowship Programme for Postdocs

Publications (partial selection)

2016Mangner N, Bowen TS, Werner S, Fischer T, Kullnick Y, Oberbach A, Linke A, Steil L, Schuler G, Adams V.: Exercise Training Prevents Diaphragm Contractile Dysfunction in Heart Failure.. In: Med Sci Sports Exerc, 2016, 2118-2124
2016Okushima D, Poole DC, Barstow TJ, Rossiter HB, Kondo N, Bowen TS, Amano T, Koga S: Greater V?O2peak is correlated with greater skeletal muscle deoxygenation amplitude and hemoglobin concentration within individual muscles during ramp-incremental cycle exercise. . In: Physiol Rep, 2016, 13065
2016Bowen TS, Eisenkolb S, Werner S, Schwarzer M, Schuler G, Adams V: Inheriting a high aerobic fitness predisposes to skeletal muscle and endothelial dysfunction in chronic heart failure.. In: Int J Cardiol, 2016, 19-26
2016Höllriegel R, Winzer EB, Linke A, Adams V, Mangner N, Sandri M, Bowen TS, Hambrecht R, Schuler G, Erbs S.: Long-Term Exercise Training in Patients With Advanced Chronic Heart Failure: SUSTAINED BENEFITS ON LEFT VENTRICULAR PERFORMANCE AND EXERCISE CAPACITY.. In: J Cardiopulm Rehabil Prev., 2016, 117-124
2016Seiler M, Bowen TS, Rolim N, Dieterlen MT, Werner S, Hoshi T, Fischer T, Mangner N, Linke A, Schuler G, Halle M, Wisloff U, Adams V. Skeletal Muscle Alterations Are Exacerbated in Heart Failure With Reduced (HFrEF) Compared to Preserved Ejection Fraction (HFpEF): Mediated by Circulating Cytokines? . In: Circ Heart Failure, 2016, e003027
2015Bowen TS, Mangner N, Werner S, Glaser S, Kullnick Y, Schrepper A, Doenst T, Oberbach A, Linke A, Steil L, Schuler G, Adams V.: Diaphragm muscle weakness in mice is early-onset post-myocardial infarction and associated with elevated protein oxidation. In: Journal of Applied Physiology, 2015, 11-19
2015Matsuo Y, Gleitsmann K, Mangner N, Werner S, Bowen TS, Kricke A, Matsumoto Y, Kurabayashi M, Schuler G, Linke A, Adams V: FNDC5 expression in skeletal muscle in chronic heart failure – relevance of inflammatory cytokines. In: J Cachexia Sarcopenia Muscle, 2015,
2015Bowen TS, Rolim NPL, Fischer T, Bakkerud F, Medeiros A, Werner S, Bronstad E, Rognmo O, Mangner N, Linke A, Schuler G, Silva GJ, Wisloff U, Adams V: Heart failure with preserved ejection fraction induces molecular, mitochondrial, histological, and functional impairments in rat respiratory and limb skeletal muscle. In: European Journal of Heart Failure, 2015,
2015Adams V, Alves M, Fischer T, Rolim N, Werner S, Schütt N, Bowen TS, Schuler G, Wisloff U.: High intensity interval training attenuates endothelial dysfunction in heart failure with preserved ejection fraction (HFpEF). . In: J Appl Physiol, 2015, 745-52
2015Bowen TS, Schuler G, Adams V. Skeletal Muscle Wasting in Cachexia and Sarcopenia: Molecular Pathophysiology and Impact of Exercise Training. In: J Cachexia Sarcopenia Muscle, 2015, 197-207
2014Riedel S, Radzanowski S, Bowen TS, Werner S, Erbs S, Schuler G, Adams V.: Exercise training improves high-density lipoprotein-mediated transcription of proangiogenic microRNA in endothelial cells.. In: Eur J Prev Cardiol., 2014,
Mangner N, Weikert B, Bowen TS, Sandri M, Höllriegel R, Erbs S, Möbius-Winkler S, Hambrecht R, Schuler G, Linke A, Adams V, Gielen S. Skeletal Muscle Alterations in Chronic Heart Failure - Differential Effects on Molecular Biology in Quadriceps Muscle and Diaphragm. In: J Cachexia Sarcopenia Muscle. ,
Bowen TS, Amano T, Kondo N, Koga SK, Rossiter HB: The spatial distribution of absolute skeletal muscle deoxygenation during ramp-incremental exercise is not influenced by hypoxia. . In: Adv Exp Med Biol, ,