Stanley Salmons

Stanley Salmons

Professor Stanley Salmons
Born Stanley Salmons
1939
Lower Clapton, east London
Spouse Paula Salmons

Stanley Salmons (born 1939) is a British academic and scientist. A Professor Emeritus of Medical Cell Biology at Liverpool University,[1] he is known for his pioneering research in the neurology, biochemistry and physiology of skeletal muscle.[2][3] In 1967 he designed the first implantable neuromuscular stimulator and in 1969 he "was the first to introduce the design of the buckle-type transducer for recording directly in vivo tendon forces in animals."[4] His 1976 work with the implanted electrical "pacemakers" on rabbit muscles (published in Nature) clarified the relationship between nerve signals and muscle chemistry and established the adaptive nature of skeletal muscle.[5]

Life and career

Salmons was born in Lower Clapton, east London, and was educated at St. Marylebone Grammar School. He was awarded a Royal Scholarship to attend the Imperial College in London, from which he graduated in physics and went on to gain a D.I.C. in Electronics and Communications. Salmons later attended the University College London on a Nuffield Foundation bursary, where he graduated with a Master's degree in Physiology. He was then appointed to a Research Fellowship in the Department of Anatomy, University of Birmingham, where he subsequently held a Stothert Research Fellowship of the Royal Society. He also worked for a time in the Department of Physiology at Harvard Medical School.

He was a Senior Lecturer when he left Birmingham University for the University of Liverpool where he was Professor of Medical Cell Biology from 1987 until 1996 and is now a Professor Emeritus.[6] Salmons gave the 1989 Erasmus Wilson Demonstration at the Royal College of Surgeons of England,[7] and has also served as Director of the British Heart Foundation Skeletal Muscle Assist Research Group. He is a Fellow of the Institute of Physics and Engineering in Medicine and of the Anatomical Society and was a former President of the International Society on Biotelemetry. He helped found the International Functional Electrical Stimulation Society and is an Honorary Member of the Board of Directors for Deutsche Gesellschaft für Elektrostimulation und Elektrotherapie.[8]

Salmons has written over 200 scientific articles and 12 scientific books, as well as more than 40 short stories and a number of novels. After his retirement from Liverpool University, he has continued to serve as peer-reviewer and sits on the editorial boards of Basic & Applied Myology, and Medical Engineering & Physics.[9][10]

Bibliography (selective)

Fiction

Most cited peer-reviewed articles

Stanley Salmons "Adaptive change in electrically stimulated muscle: a framework for the design of clinical protocols (Invited review)." Muscle and Nerve 2009, Volume 40, Issue 6, pp 918–935.

References

  1. University of Liverpool. Emeritus Professors. Retrieved 17 December 2012.
  2. Preedy, Victor R. and Peters, Timothy J.(2002). Skeletal Muscle: Pathology, Diagnosis and Management of Disease, p. 555. Cambridge University Press.
  3. Troidl, Hans et al. (1998). Surgical Research: Basic Principles and Clinical Practice, p. 10. Springer.
  4. Komi, Paavo V. (2011). Neuromuscular Aspects of Sports Performance. John Wiley & Sons.
  5. "Nerve Signals Dictate Muscle Chemistry". New Scientist, p 93. Oct 14, 1976. Retrieved 17 December 2012.
  6. Anapol, Fred; German, Rebecca Z.;Jablonski, Nina G. (eds.) (2004). Shaping Primate Evolution: Form, Function, and Behavior, p. 227. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0521811074
  7. BMJ (April 1989). Notes, Vol 298, p. 1190.
  8. Krames, Elliot (2009). Neuromodulation. Academic Press. p. 59. ISBN 012374248X.
  9. Krieger, Candace. "Stanley Salmons turns his microscope on fiction-writing". Jewish Chronicle. Retrieved 17 December 2012.
  10. Biotelemetry XIV. Tectum Verlag. 1998. pp. 243–250. ISBN 3828890121.
  11. 1 2

External links

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