Sarah Greising, PhD, associate professor in the School of Kinesiology and director of the Skeletal Muscle Plasticity and Regeneration Laboratory (SMPRL), and colleague Jarrod Call, PhD, from the University of Georgia, have co-edited a book entitled, “Regenerative Rehabilitation: From Basic Science to the Clinic“, published by the American Physiological Society APS, in partnership with Springer Nature. This book is part of a larger series published on behalf of the APS by Springer: Physiology in Health and Disease. The goal of the book was to collectively draw attention to the current field of regenerative rehabilitation across a broad range of neuromusculoskeletal tissues, with esteemed colleges in the fields contributing chapters on bone, skeletal muscle, cartilage, ligaments/tendons, vasculature, and the central and peripheral nervous tissue in the context of regenerative rehabilitation.
Multiple chapters in “Regenerative Rehabilitation: From Basic Science to the Clinic” were co-authored by members of the SMPRL.
Historical perspectives of regenerative rehabilitation, co-authored by Dr. Greising, Dr. Christiana Raymond-Pope, and Daniel Hoffman;
Considerations for small animal physical rehabilitation, co-authored by Dr. Greising and Alec Basten;
Pathophysiology of volumetric muscle loss and targets for regenerative rehabilitation, co-authored by Dr. Jake Sorensen.