Jonathan L. Hassel
Indiana University
4 Papers
30 Citations
Jonathan L. Hassel is an academic researcher from Indiana University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Stellate ganglion & Microneurography. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 4 publications.
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Papers
Simultaneous noninvasive recording of skin sympathetic nerve activity and electrocardiogram
Anisiia Doytchinova,Jonathan L. Hassel,Yuan Yuan,Yuan Yuan,Hongbo Lin,Dechun Yin,Dechun Yin,David Adams,Susan Straka,Keith C. Wright,Kimberly Smith,David Wagner,Changyu Shen,Vicenta Salanova,Chad Meshberger,Lan S. Chen,John C. Kincaid,Arthur C. Coffey,Gang Wu,Gang Wu,Yan Li,Richard J. Kovacs,Thomas H. Everett,Ronald G. Victor,Yong Mei Cha,Shien-Fong Lin,Shien-Fong Lin,Peng Sheng Chen +27 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors developed a method for simultaneous noninvasive recording of skin sympathetic nerve activity (SKNA) and electrocardiogram (ECG) using conventional ECG electrodes.
124
Left cervical vagal nerve stimulation reduces skin sympathetic nerve activity in patients with drug resistant epilepsy
Yuan Yuan,Yuan Yuan,Jonathan L. Hassel,Anisiia Doytchinova,David Adams,Keith C. Wright,Chad Meshberger,Lan S. Chen,Maria P. Guerra,Changyu Shen,Shien-Fong Lin,Shien-Fong Lin,Thomas H. Everett,Vicenta Salanova,Peng Sheng Chen +14 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors used ECG patch electrodes to continuously record skin sympathetic nerve activity (SKNA) in 26 patients with drug-resistant epilepsy who were admitted for video electroencephalographic monitoring.
31
Ondansetron blocks wild-type and p.F503L variant small-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ channels.
Jum Suk Ko,Jum Suk Ko,Shuai Guo,Jonathan L. Hassel,Patrícia B. S. Celestino-Soper,Ty C. Lynnes,James E. Tisdale,James E. Tisdale,James Zheng,Stanley Taylor,Tatiana Foroud,Michael D. Murray,Michael D. Murray,Richard J. Kovacs,Xiaochun Li,Shien-Fong Lin,Shien-Fong Lin,Zhenhui Chen,Matteo Vatta,Peng-Sheng Chen,Michael Rubart +20 more
TL;DR: The authors showed that ondansetron, a 5-HT3 receptor antagonist, blocks small-conductance Ca2+-activated K+ (SK) current, which may be useful in controlling arrhythmias in which increased SK current is increased.
23
Simultaneous noninvasive recording of skin sympathetic nerve activity and electrocardiogram
Anisiia Doytchinova,Jonathan L. Hassel,Yuan Yuan,Yuan Yuan,Hongbo Lin,Dechun Yin,Dechun Yin,David Adams,Susan Straka,Keith C. Wright,Kimberly Smith,David Wagner,Changyu Shen,Vicenta Salanova,Chad Meshberger,Lan S. Chen,John C. Kincaid,Arthur C. Coffey,Gang Wu,Gang Wu,Yan Li,Richard J. Kovacs,Thomas H. Everett,Ronald G. Victor,Yong Mei Cha,Shien-Fong Lin,Shien-Fong Lin,Peng Sheng Chen +27 more
- 01 Jan 2017
TL;DR: SKNA is detectable using conventional ECG electrodes in humans and may be useful in estimating sympathetic tone and this method (neuECG) can be used to adequately estimate sympathetic tone.