Matthew Babcock

Affiliations: 
University of Delaware, Newark, DE, United States 
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"Matthew Babcock"
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Babcock MC, El-Kurd OB, Bagley JR, et al. (2024) Acute Cardiovascular Responses to the 100-Mile Western States Endurance Run. Journal of Applied Physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)
Babcock MC, Robinson AT. (2024) Not like us: Exploring the cardiovascular consequences of ultramarathons. Experimental Physiology
Tharpe MA, Linder BA, Babcock MC, et al. (2023) Adjusting for Muscle Strength and Body Size Attenuates Sex Differences in the Exercise Pressor Reflex in Young Adults. American Journal of Physiology. Heart and Circulatory Physiology
Linder BA, Babcock MC, Pollin KU, et al. (2023) Short-term high salt intake does not influence resting or exercising heart rate variability but increases MCP-1 concentration in healthy young adults. American Journal of Physiology. Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology
Barnett AM, Babcock MC, Watso JC, et al. (2022) High dietary salt intake increases urinary NGAL excretion and creatinine clearance in healthy young adults. American Journal of Physiology. Renal Physiology
Migdal KU, Robinson AT, Watso JC, et al. (2021) Ten days of high dietary sodium does not impair cerebral blood flow regulation in healthy adults. Autonomic Neuroscience : Basic & Clinical. 234: 102826
Watso JC, Babcock MC, Migdal KU, et al. (2021) The relation between habitual physical activity and sympathetic vascular transduction in healthy young adults. Clinical Autonomic Research : Official Journal of the Clinical Autonomic Research Society
Migdal KU, Robinson AT, Watso JC, et al. (2020) A high salt meal does not impair cerebrovascular reactivity in healthy young adults. Physiological Reports. 8: e14585
Watso JC, Robinson AT, Babcock MC, et al. (2020) Short-term water deprivation attenuates the exercise pressor reflex in older female adults. Physiological Reports. 8: e14581
Babcock MC, Robinson AT, Migdal KU, et al. (2020) High Salt Intake Augments Blood Pressure Responses During Submaximal Aerobic Exercise. Journal of the American Heart Association. e015633
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