Dr Rehan Junejo

My profile

Biography

Senior Lecturer in Human Physiology in the Department of Life Sciences with pedagogic responsibilities to help support undergraduate and postgraduate teaching. Research interests are in integrative neural and metabolic control of cerebrovascular and cardiovascular systems investigating basic and translational research questions in healthy and diseased populations. Research fellow at Liverpool Centre for Cardiovascular Science (University of Liverpool and Liverpool Heart and Chest Hospital). I serve on Hypertension’s editorial board as an early career editorial fellow and peer review manuscripts for a number of scientific journals (Experimental Physiology, European Journal of Applied Physiology, Physiological Reports, Journal of Applied Physiology, American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology, EuroPace and others).

I am currently seeking highly motivated research students who are interested in studying basic and/or translational questions pertaining to cerebrovascular and/or cardiovascular control in humans. Prospective research students (MRes and PhD) are encouraged to directly contact me to discuss potential projects / opportunities.

Academic and professional qualifications

Fellowship of Advance Higher Education 2022

PhD Physiology; University of Birmingham 2017
MSc Integrated Physiology; University of Nottingham 2011
MBBS; Liaquat University of Medical and Health Sciences 2009

Teaching

Courses

Research outputs

Prizes and awards

Caroline tum Suden / Frances Hellebrandt Award for Meritorious Research - 2015

Visiting and honorary positions

Research Fellow - Liverpool Centre for Cardiovascular Science and University of Liverpool (2018 - )

Membership of professional associations

The Physiological Society (2012 - )

American Physiological Society (2013 - )

Cerebrovascular Research Network (2018 - )

Research Outputs

Ball, J. D., Hills, E., Altaf, A., Ramesh, P., Green, M., Surti, F. B., … & C Beishon, L. (2024). Neurovascular coupling methods in healthy individuals using transcranial doppler ultrasonography: A systematic review and consensus agreement. Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism, 0271678X241270452.

Walsh, H.J., Junejo, R.T., Lip, G.Y. and Fisher, J.P., 2024. The effect of hypertension on cerebrovascular carbon dioxide reactivity in atrial fibrillation patients. Hypertension Research, pp.1-10.

Junejo, R.T., Gupta, D., Snowdon, R.L., Lip, G.Y. and Fisher, J.P., 2024. Relationship of Warfarin and Apixaban with Vascular Function in Patients with Atrial Fibrillation. Journal of Vascular Research, 61(2), pp.59-67.

Alali, M.H., Lucas, R.A., Junejo, R.T. and Fisher, J.P., 2022. Impact of acute dynamic exercise and arterial shear rate modification on radial artery low-flow mediated constriction in young men. European Journal of Applied Physiology, pp.1-11.

Khan, A.A., Junejo, R.T., Thomas, G.N., Fisher, J.P. and Lip, G.Y.H., 2021. Assessment of cardiac autonomic function in patients with permanent and paroxysmal atrial fibrillation. European Heart Journal42(Supplement_1), pp.ehab724-0426.

Khan, A.A., Junejo, R.T., Thomas, G.N., Fisher, J.P. and Lip, G.Y.H., 2021. Association between atrial high rate episode burden and autonomic and vascular function in patients with implanted cardiac device. European Heart Journal42(Supplement_1), pp.ehab724-0282.

Khan, A.A., Junejo, R.T., Alsharari, R., Thomas, G.N., Fisher, J.P. and Lip, G.Y., 2021. A greater burden of atrial fibrillation is associated with worse endothelial dysfunction in hypertension. Journal of Human Hypertension35(8), pp.667-677.

Khan, A., Junejo, R., Fisher, J., Thomas, N. and Lip, G., 2021. 86 Cardiac autonomic function influences in atrial fibrillation and hypertension.

Khan, A., Alsharari, R., Junejo, R., Thomas, N., Fisher, J. and Lip, G., 2021. 83 Autonomic and vascular function characteristics in patients with atrial high rate episodes.

AlSalahi, S.E., Junejo, R.T., Bradley, C., Balanos, G.M., Siebenmann, C. and Fisher, J.P., 2021. The middle cerebral artery blood velocity response to acute normobaric hypoxia occurs independently of changes in ventilation in humans. Experimental Physiology106(4), pp.861-867.

Khan, A., Junejo, R., Thomas, N., Fisher, J. and Lip, G., 2021. 101 Role of cardiac autonomic function in pathophysiology of permanent AF. Cardiac rhythm management.

Khan, A.A., Junejo, R.T., Thomas, G.N., Fisher, J.P. and Lip, G.Y., 2021. Heart rate variability in patients with atrial fibrillation and hypertension. European journal of clinical investigation51(1), p.e13361.

Alali, M.H., Vianna, L.C., Lucas, R.A., Junejo, R.T. and Fisher, J.P., 2020. Impact of whole body passive heat stress and arterial shear rate modification on radial artery function in young men. Journal of Applied Physiology129(6), pp.1373-1382.

Junejo, R.T., 2020. Muscle afferent contributions to exercise intolerance in heart failure. The Journal of Physiology.

Junejo, R.T., Lip, G.Y. and Fisher, J.P., 2020. Cerebrovascular dysfunction in atrial fibrillation. Frontiers in physiology11, p.1066.

Junejo, R.T., Braz, I.D., Lucas, S.J., van Lieshout, J.J., Phillips, A.A., Lip, G.Y. and Fisher, J.P., 2020. Neurovascular coupling and cerebral autoregulation in atrial fibrillation. Journal of Cerebral Blood Flow & Metabolism40(8), pp.1647-1657.

Junejo, R.T., Ray, C.J. and Marshall, J.M., 2020. Prostaglandin contribution to postexercise hyperemia is dependent on tissue oxygenation during rhythmic and isometric contractions. Physiological reports8(12), p.e14471.

AlSalahi, S.E., Braz, I.D., Ahmed, A., Junejo, R.T. and Fisher, J.P., 2020. Human cerebrovascular responses to diving are not related to facial cooling. Experimental physiology105(6), pp.940-949.

Junejo, R.T., May, S., Alsalahi, S., Alali, M., Ogoh, S. and Fisher, J.P., 2020. Cerebrovascular carbon dioxide reactivity and flow-mediated dilation in young healthy South Asian and Caucasian European men. American Journal of Physiology-Heart and Circulatory Physiology318(4), pp.H756-H763.

Junejo, R.T., Braz, I.D., Lucas, S.J., van Lieshout, J.J., Lip, G.Y. and Fisher, J.P., 2019. Impaired cerebrovascular reactivity in patients with atrial fibrillation. Journal of the American College of Cardiology73(10), pp.1230-1232.

Junejo, R.T., Phillips, A., Lucas, S.J., van Lieshout, J.J., Lip, G.Y. and Fisher, J.P., 2019. Neurovascular coupling is blunted in atrial fibrillation. The FASEB Journal33(S1), pp.696-3.

Junejo, R.T., Ray, C.J. and Marshall, J.M., 2019. Cuff inflation time significantly affects blood flow recorded with venous occlusion plethysmography. European journal of applied physiology119(3), pp.665-674.

Ormshaw, N.G., Junejo, R.T. and Marshall, J.M., 2018. Forearm vasodilator responses to environmental stress and reactive hyperaemia are impaired in young South Asian men. European Journal of Applied Physiology118(5), pp.979-988.

Junejo, R.T., 2017. Contribution of oxygen-dependent mechanisms to vascular responses of exercise in young and older men: the role of prostaglandins and adenosine (Doctoral dissertation, University of Birmingham).

Junejo, R.T., Ray, C.J., Lucas, S.J. and Marshall, J.M., 2016. Investigation into effects of supplementary O2 on tissue oxygenation during isometric handgrip in the ipsilateral and contralateral limb in young (Y) and older (O) men using Near Infra Red Spectroscopy (NIRS). The FASEB Journal30, pp.761-9.

Aiku, A.O., Ormshaw, N.G., Junejo, R.T., Martin, U. and Marshall, J.M., 2016. Both Endothelium‐Dependent Dilatation Responses And Muscle Vasodilator Responses To Environmental Stressors Are Impaired In Young Black Africans And May Contribute To Their Predisposition To Develop Hypertension. The FASEB Journal30, pp.1206-5.

Ormshaw, N., Junejo, R. and Marshall, J., 2015. PD. 03. Both endothelium-dependent dilator responses and muscle vasodilator responses to environmental stressors are impaired in Young South Asians and may predispose to hypertension. Journal of Human Hypertension29(10), pp.644-645.

Junejo, R., Ray, C. and Marshall, J., 2015. O2 dependent contributions of prostaglandins (PGI2 PGE2) to exercise hyperaemia in young (Y) and older (O) men. The FASEB Journal29, pp.994-19.

Ray, C., Junejo, R. and Marshall, J., 2015. Does Adenosine make an O2 Dependent Contribution to Exercise Hyperaemia?. The FASEB Journal29, pp.994-14.

Junejo, R., Ray, C. and Marshall, J., 2015. Prostaglandins (PGs) Contribute in an O2 Dependent Manner to Reflex Vasoconstriction in Exercise. The FASEB Journal29, pp.994-20.

Marshall, J., Junejo, R., D’Souza, F. and Ray, C., 2015. Effects of breathing O2 at different concentrations on reactive oxygen species (ROS) and endothelium dependent dilatation. The FASEB Journal29, pp.787-4.

Junejo, R., Ray, C. and Marshall, J., 2014. Prostaglandins contribute in an O2‐dependent manner to exercise hyperaemia following rhythmic and isometric handgrip exercise in young and older healthy subjects (1106.4). The FASEB Journal28, pp.1106-4.

Junejo, R.T., Pavliv, F.N., Ray, C.J. and Marshall, J.M., Comparison between automated inflation and manual inflation for forearm blood flow measurements made with venous occlusion plethysmography in humans.

Media

Christian Eriksen: why do cardiac arrests happen in some athletes?