Wesley S. Haynie Source Confirmed

Affiliation confirmed via AI analysis of OpenAlex, ORCID, and web sources.

Researcher

University of Arkansas at Fayetteville

faculty

13 h-index 38 pubs 723 cited

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Biography and Research Information

OverviewAI-generated summary

Wesley S. Haynie's research focuses on skeletal muscle physiology, particularly in the context of disease states such as cancer cachexia and disuse atrophy. His work investigates the molecular and cellular alterations that occur in muscle during these conditions, with a recent emphasis on biological sex differences in these responses. Haynie has published studies examining fibrosis development, mitochondrial aberrations, and metabolic and contractile changes in rodent models of cancer cachexia. He also studies skeletal muscle regeneration and the effects of interventions like voluntary wheel running and leucine supplementation.

His scholarship metrics include an h-index of 13, with 38 total publications and 723 citations. Haynie has collaborated with several researchers at the University of Arkansas at Fayetteville, including Tyrone A. Washington, Megan E. Rosa‐Caldwell, Nicholas P. Greene, and Eleanor R. Schrems, with whom he has co-authored multiple publications.

Metrics

  • h-index: 13
  • Publications: 38
  • Citations: 723

Selected Publications

  • Leucine Supplementation Exacerbates Morbidity in Male but Not Female Mice with Colorectal Cancer-Induced Cachexia (2023) DOI
  • Development of skeletal muscle fibrosis in a rodent model of cancer cachexia (2023) DOI
  • Biological Sex Differences of Fibrosis During the Development of Cancer Cachexia (2023) DOI
  • Effects of PGC-1α overexpression on the myogenic response during skeletal muscle regeneration (2022) DOI
  • Development of metabolic and contractile alterations in development of cancer cachexia in female tumor-bearing mice (2021) DOI
  • Mitochondrial aberrations during the progression of disuse atrophy differentially affect male and female mice (2021) DOI
  • Female mice may have exacerbated catabolic signalling response compared to male mice during development and progression of disuse atrophy (2021) DOI
  • The effect of autologous repair and voluntary wheel running on force recovery in a rat model of volumetric muscle loss (2021) DOI
  • The effect of diet-induced obesity on extracellular matrix remodeling during skeletal muscle regeneration (2021) DOI

Collaborators

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