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1.
Frog sartorius muscle stimulated isometrically for 3 s every 256 s to attain a steady state in which initial heat (QI), recovery heat (QR), rate of O2 consumption (JO2), and isometric force (PO) generated are constant for each cycle. For a 3-s tetanus given every 256 s, JO2 was 0.106 mumol/(min . g blotted weight), approximately 71% of the maximum rate observed, whereas lactate production was negligible under these conditions. QI, QT(= QI + QR), and QT/QI were 88.2, 181.5, 2.06 mJ/g blotted weight, respectively. The high-energy phosphate breakdown (delta approximately P) breakdown during the first 3-s tetanus was not different from that during a contraction in the steady state and averaged 1.1 mumol/g blotted weight. Less than half of the initial heat could be accounted for in terms of the extent of the known chemical reactions occurring during contraction. From the stoichiometry of the theoretical biochemical pathways, the amount of ATP synthesized in the steady state exceeds delta approximately P during contraction by more than twofold, corresponding to an apparent ADP:O ratio of 1.5. If it is assumed that carbohydrate oxidation is the only net chemical reaction in the steady state, the total heat production can be explained on the basis of the measured JO2. Under this assumption, heat production during recovery was less than that expected on the basis of the oxygen consumption and delta approximately P during contraction. These observations support the hypothesis that the unexplained enthalpy production and low apparent ADP:O ratio are causally related, i.e., that the reaction(s) producing the unexplained heat during contraction is reversed during the recovery period.  相似文献   

2.
High-energy phosphate metabolism and energy liberated as heat and work were measured in 3-s tetani of frog sartorius muscle at 0 degree C. Two contraction periods were studied: (a) a 0.35-s period of shortening near half-maximum velocity beginning after 2 s of isometric stimulation, and (b) a 0.65-s isometric period immediately following the shortening. There were no significant changes in levels of ATP, ADP, or AMP in the two contraction periods. The observed changes in inorganic phosphate and creatine levels indicated that the only significant reaction occurring was phosphocreatine splitting. The mean rate of high-energy phosphate splitting during the shortening, 1.60 +/- 0.23 mumol X g-1 X s-1 (n = 24), was about fivefold higher than that in the 1-s period in the isometric tetanus, 0.32 +/- 0.11 mumol X g-1 X s- 1 (n = 17), observed in our previous study. The mean rate in the post- shortening period, 0.46 +/- 0.13 mumol X g-1 X s-1 (n = 17), was not significantly different from that in the 1-s period in the isometric tetanus. A large amount of heat plus work was produced during the shortening period, and this could be accounted for by simultaneous chemical changes. In the post-shortening period, the observed enthalpy was also accounted for by simultaneous chemical reactions. Thus, the present result is in sharp contrast to that obtained from a similar study performed at a shortening at Vmax, where an enthalpy excess was produced during shortening and an enthalpy deficit was produced during the period following the shortening.  相似文献   

3.
Our purpose was to characterize the relationship between EMG mean power frequency (MPF) or median frequency (MF) and rate of torque development in voluntary ballistic and electrically elicited isometric contractions. Twenty-three healthy adults participated in two sets of experiments performed on elbow flexor muscles. For Experiment 1, subjects were asked to generate voluntary ballistic contractions by reaching four different target torque levels (20, 40, 60 and 100% of the maximal voluntary contraction (MVC)) as fast as they could. For Experiment 2, electrical (M-waves) and mechanical (twitches) responses to electrical stimulation of the nerves supplying the biceps brachii and brachioradialis muscles were recorded with the subjects at rest and with a background isometric contraction of 15% MVC. MPF, MF and rate of torque development (% MVC/s) were calculated for both voluntary and elicited contractions. Significant positive correlations were observed between MPF and rate of torque development for the voluntary contractions, whereas significant negative correlations were observed between the two variables for elicited contractions. This suggests that factors other than muscle fiber composition influence the frequency content of EMG signals and/or the rate of torque development, and that the effect of these factors will vary between voluntary and elicited contractions.  相似文献   

4.
The dependence of PC1 and ATP1 dephosphorylation on the number of isometric twitches in the iodoacetate-nitrogen-poisoned muscle has been examined. There is no net dephosphorylation of adenosinetriphosphate. PC dephosphorylation varies linearly with the number of twitches and produces equivalent amounts of C1 and P1i.1 Iodoacetate concentrations which block the enzyme, creatine phosphokinase, render the muscle non-contractile. A value of 0.286 µmole/gm. for the amount of PC split per twitch is obtained which gives a value of -9.62 kcal./mole for the "physiological" heat of hydrolysis of PC in agreement with expectations based on thermochemical data. In a single maximal isometric twitch it is estimated that 2 to 3 PC molecules are dephosphorylated per myosin molecule, or 1 per actin molecule. The results support the view that under the conditions of these experiments PC dephosphorylation is the net energy yielding reaction. The in vivo stoichiometry of the mechano-chemistry of contraction revealed by these studies on the one hand, and the known stoichiometry of actin polymerization and its coupling to the creatine phosphokinase system on the other are strikingly similar and strongly suggest that the reversible polymerization of actin is involved in a major way in the contraction-relaxation-recovery cycle of muscle.  相似文献   

5.
A phenomenological model for muscle energy consumption was developed and used in conjunction with a simple Hill-type model for muscle contraction. The model was used to address two questions. First, can an empirical model of muscle energetics accurately represent the total energetic behavior of frog muscle in isometric, isotonic, and isokinetic contractions? And second, how does such a model perform in a large-scale, multiple-muscle model of human walking? Four simulations were conducted with frog sartorius muscle under full excitation: an isometric contraction, a set of isotonic contractions with the muscle shortening a constant distance under various applied loads, a set of isotonic contractions with the muscle shortening over various distances under a constant load, and an isokinetic contraction in lengthening. The model calculations were evaluated against results of similar thermal in vitro experiments performed on frog sartorius muscle. The energetics model was then incorporated into a large-scale, multiple-muscle model of the human body for the purpose of predicting energy consumption during normal walking. The total energy estimated by the model accurately reflected the observed experimental behavior of frog muscle for an isometric contraction. The model also accurately reproduced the experimental behavior of frog muscle heat production under isotonic shortening and isokinetic lengthening conditions. The estimated rate of metabolic energy consumption for walking was 29% higher than the value typically obtained from gait measurements.  相似文献   

6.
It has been known for a long time that the steady-state isometric force after muscle stretch is bigger than the corresponding force obtained in a purely isometric contraction for electrically stimulated and maximal voluntary contractions (MVC). Recent studies using sub-maximal voluntary contractions showed that force enhancement only occurred in a sub-group of subjects suggesting that force enhancement for sub-maximal voluntary contractions has properties different from those of electrically-induced and maximal voluntary contractions. Specifically, force enhancement for sub-maximal voluntary contractions may contain an activation-dependent component that is independent of muscle stretching. To address this hypothesis, we tested for force enhancement using (i) sub-maximal electrically-induced contractions and stretch and (ii) using various activation levels preceding an isometric reference contraction at 30% of MVC (no stretch). All tests were performed on human adductor pollicis muscles. Force enhancement following stretching was found for all subjects (n = 10) and all activation levels (10%, 30%, and 60% of MVC) for electrically-induced contractions. In contrast, force enhancement at 30% of MVC, preceded by 6 s of 10%, 60%, and 100% of MVC was only found in a sub-set of the subjects and only for the 60% and 100% conditions. This result suggests that there is an activation-dependent force enhancement for some subjects for sub-maximal voluntary contractions. This activation-dependent force enhancement was always smaller than the stretch-induced force enhancement obtained at the corresponding activation levels. Active muscle stretching increased the force enhancement in all subjects, independent whether they showed activation dependence or not. It appears that post-activation potentiation, and the associated phosphorylation of the myosin light chains, might account for the stretch-independent force enhancement observed here.  相似文献   

7.
Adaptations to repeated bouts of injury-inducing lengthening contractions were studied in mouse anterior crural muscles. Five bouts of 150 lengthening contractions were performed in vivo, with each bout separated by 2 wk of rest. Three primary observations were made. First, there was little, if any, attenuation in the immediate isometric torque losses after lengthening contractions at "physiological" stimulation frequencies (i.e., <125 Hz), although there was a pronounced decrease in torque loss at higher frequencies between the first and second bouts. Second, the immediate losses in strength that occurred after all five lengthening contraction bouts could be explained in part by excitation-contraction uncoupling. Third, the most important adaptation was a significant enhancement in the rate of recovery of strength after the lengthening contractions. It is probable that the accelerated rate of strength recovery resulted from the more rapid loss and subsequent recovery of myofibrillar protein observed after the fifth bout.  相似文献   

8.
Fatigue in muscles that shorten might have other causes than fatigue during isometric contractions, since both cross-bridge cycling and energy demand are different in the two exercise modes. While isometric contractions are extensively studied, the causes of fatigue in shortening contractions are poorly mapped. Here, we investigate fatigue mechanisms during shortening contractions in slow twitch skeletal muscle in near physiological conditions. Fatigue was induced in rat soleus muscles with maintained blood supply by in situ shortening contractions at 37°C. Muscles were stimulated repeatedly (1 s on/off at 30 Hz) for 15 min against a constant load, allowing the muscle to shorten and perform work. Fatigue and subsequent recovery was examined at 20 s, 100 s and 15 min exercise. The effects of prior exercise were investigated in a second exercise bout. Fatigue developed in three distinct phases. During the first 20 s the regulatory protein Myosin Light Chain-2 (slow isoform, MLC-2s) was rapidly dephosphorylated in parallel with reduced rate of force development and reduced shortening. In the second phase there was degradation of high-energy phosphates and accumulation of lactate, and these changes were related to slowing of muscle relengthening and relaxation, culminating at 100 s exercise. Slowing of relaxation was also associated with increased leak of calcium from the SR. During the third phase of exercise there was restoration of high-energy phosphates and elimination of lactate, and the slowing of relaxation disappeared, whereas dephosphorylation of MLC-2s and reduced shortening prevailed. Prior exercise improved relaxation parameters in a subsequent exercise bout, and we propose that this effect is a result of less accumulation of lactate due to more rapid onset of oxidative metabolism. The correlation between dephosphorylation of MLC-2s and reduced shortening was confirmed in various experimental settings, and we suggest MLC-2s as an important regulator of muscle shortening.  相似文献   

9.
Energy Production in Cardiac Isotonic Contractions   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The energy output of rabbit papillary muscle is examined and it is shown that there is more energy liberated in an afterloaded isotonic contraction than in an "equivalent" isometric contraction. This statement holds true regardless of whether equivalence is based on the proposition that tension or the time integral of tension is the best index of muscle energy expenditure. Besides the external work performed there is additional heat production in isotonic contractions and this heat increases as the afterload is decreased. The additional heat is more evident when tension rather than the time integral of tension is made the determinant of energy expenditure. It is shown in single contractions that the rate of isotonic heat production, regardless of afterload size, never exceeds the heat rate recorded in an isometric contraction at the same initial length. Experiments reveal no simple linear correlation between isotonic energy output and contractile element work. Problems associated with the compartmentalization of the energy output of a contraction are discussed.  相似文献   

10.
The effect of muscle length on neural drive (here termed "neural activation") was investigated from electromyographic activities and activation levels (twitch interpolation). The neural activation was measured in nine men during isometric and concentric (30 and 120 degrees /s) knee extensions for three muscle lengths (35, 55, and 75 degrees knee flexion, i.e., shortened, intermediate, and lengthened muscles, respectively). Long (76 degrees ), medium (56 degrees ), and short (36 degrees ) ranges of motion were used to investigate the effect of the duration of concentric contraction. Neural activation was found to depend on muscle length. Reducing the duration of contraction had no effect. Neural activation was higher with short muscle length during isometric contractions and was weaker for shortened than for intermediate and lengthened muscles performing 120 degrees /s concentric contractions. Muscle length had no effect on 30 degrees /s concentric neural activation. Peripheral mechanisms and discharge properties of the motoneurons could partly explain the observed differences in the muscle length effect. We thus conclude that muscle length has a predominant effect on neural activation that would modulate the angular velocity dependency.  相似文献   

11.
The aim of this study was to compare mechanomyogram (MMG) recorded by a condenser microphone (MIC) and an accelerometer (ACC) during submaximal isometric, concentric and eccentric contractions in 14 males. The maximal voluntary force (MVC) of the biceps brachii was measured. The subjects were asked to do short duration isometric, concentric and eccentric contraction at 10%, 30%, 50%, 70% MVC twice. For the concentric and eccentric contraction, the subject bent his arm for 3s (concentric) then held it for 3s and extended (eccentric) during 3s. The normalized root mean square (RMS) and mean power frequency (MPF) increased linearly with increased force for both transducers. There was a correlation between MIC MPF and ACC MPF at 10%, 30%, 50% MVC, and between MIC RMS and ACC RMS at 30% MVC during isometric contractions. There was significantly higher MPF for the ACC than for the MIC in concentric and eccentric modes, while the RMS did not differ among transducers in the three contraction modes. The RMS and MPF values coefficient of variations were significantly larger during anisometric contractions compared with isometric contractions and were lower for the accelerometer than for the microphone. The present results obtained during isometric, concentric and eccentric contractions of increased intensity showed that the information contained in microphone- and accelerometer-based MMG signals is different despite similar trends. It can be concluded that at low-moderate movement velocity, concentric contractions can be investigated by means of accelerometer and microphone.  相似文献   

12.
We tested the hypothesis that there is a constant relation between the amount of chemical energy used during a single tetanus and the extent of subsequent aerobic recovery metabolism. Breakdown of high energy compounds (Δ P) during contraction was measured by rapid freezing techniques using isometric contractions of unpoisoned frog sartorius muscles at 0 °C. A stable and sensitive method was designed to study recovery O2 consumption of similar contractions. In some cases, initial chemical changes and recovery O2 consumption were measured in the same muscle. The ratio of these chemical changes yields a value for the P/O ratio of whole muscle. This ratio was found to be 2 and was constant for the range of contraction durations studied (5–20 s). Splitting of phosphorylcreatine or ATP after mechanical relaxation and glycolytic resynthesis of ATP could not be detected. Thus, the tested hypothesis is valid; but there is no ready explanation why this estimate of the P/O ratio of whole muscle differs from the ratio measured in isolated mitochondria. Because of this constancy and the observed stoichiometry unknown energy yielding reactions, postulated to occur either early or late in a maintained tetanus, are excluded by these experiments.  相似文献   

13.
The residual force enhancement following muscle stretch might be associated with an increase in the proportion of attached cross-bridges, as supported by stiffness measurements. In this case, it could be caused by an increase in the attachment or a decrease in the detachment rate of cross-bridges, or a combination of the two. The purpose of this study was to investigate if the stretch-induced force enhancement is related to cross-bridge attachment/detachment kinetics. Single muscle fibres dissected from the lumbrical muscle of frog were place at a length approximately 20% longer than the plateau of the force-length relationship; they were maximally activated, and after full isometric force was reached, ramp stretches were imposed with amplitudes of 5 and 10% fibre length, at a speed of 40% fibre length s(-1). Experiments were performed in Ringer's solution, and with the addition of 2, 5 and 10 nM of 2,3-butanedione monoxime (BDM), a drug that places cross-bridges in a pre-power-stroke, state, inhibiting force production. The total force following stretch was higher than the corresponding force measured after isometric contraction at the corresponding length. This residual force enhancement was accompanied by an increase relaxation time. BDM, which decreases force production during isometric contractions, considerably increased the relative levels of force enhancement. BDM also increased relaxation times after stretch, beyond the levels observed during reference contractions in Ringer's solution, and beyond isometric control tests at the corresponding BDM concentrations. Together, these results support the idea that force enhancement is caused, at least in part, by a decrease in cross-bridge detachment rates, as manifested by the increased relaxation times following fibre stretch.  相似文献   

14.
We describe a unique work-loop calorimeter with which we can measure, simultaneously, the rate of heat production and force-length work output of isolated cardiac trabeculae. The mechanics of the force-length work-loop contraction mimic those of the pressure-volume work-loops experienced by the heart. Within the measurement chamber of a flow-through microcalorimeter, a trabecula is electrically stimulated to respond, under software control, in one of three modes: fixed-end, isometric, or isotonic. In each mode, software controls the position of a linear motor, with feedback from muscle force, to adjust muscle length in the desired temporal sequence. In the case of a work-loop contraction, the software achieves seamless transitions between phases of length control (isometric contraction, isometric relaxation, and restoration of resting muscle length) and force control (isotonic shortening). The area enclosed by the resulting force-length loop represents the work done by the trabecula. The change of enthalpy expended by the muscle is given by the sum of the work term and the associated amount of evolved heat. With these simultaneous measurements, we provide the first estimation of suprabasal, net mechanical efficiency (ratio of work to change of enthalpy) of mammalian cardiac trabeculae. The maximum efficiency is at the vicinity of 12%.  相似文献   

15.
Measurements of the time course of high energy phosphate splitting and energy liberation were performed on rapidly shortening Rana pipiens skeletal muscles. In muscles contracting 30 times against small loads (less the 0.02P), the ratio of explained heat + work (H + W) (calculated from the measured high energy phosphate splitting) to observed H + W (from myothermal and mechanical measurements) was 0.68 +/- 0.08 and is in agreement with results obtained in isometric tetani of R. pipiens skeletal muscle. In lightly afterloaded muscles which were tetanized for 0.6a and whose metabolism was arrested at 3.0 s after the beginning of stimulation, a similar ratio of explained H + W to observed H + W was obtained. However, in identical contractions in which metabolism was arrested at 0.5-0.75 s after the beginning of stimulation, the ratio of explained H + W to observed H + W declined significantly to values ranging from 0.15 to 0.40. These results suggest that rapid shortening at the beginning of contraction induces a delay between energy production and measurable high energy phosphate splitting. This interpretation was tested and confirmed in experiments in which one muscle of a pair contracted isometrically while the other contracted against a small afterload. The afterload and stimulus pattern were arranged so that at the time metabolism was arrested, 0.5 s after the beginning of stimulation, the total energy production by both muscles was the same. Chemical analysis revealed that the isotonically contracting muscle spilt only 25% as much high energy phosphate as did the isometrically contracting muscle.  相似文献   

16.
The aim of this study was to examine the isometric endurance response and the heart rate and blood pressure responses to isometric exercise in two muscle groups in ten young (age 23–29 years) and seven older (age 54–59 years) physically active men with similar estimated forearm and thigh muscle masses. Isometric contractions were held until fatigue using the finger flexor muscles (handgrip) and with the quadriceps muscle (one-legged knee extension) at 20%, 40%, and 60% of the maximal voluntary contraction (MVC). Heart rate and arterial pressure were related to the the individual's contraction times. The isometric endurance response was longer with handgrip than with one-legged knee extension, but no significant difference was observed between the age groups. The isometric endurance response averaged 542 (SEM 57), 153 (SEM 14), and 59 (SEM 5) s for the handgrip, and 276 (SEM 35), 94 (SEM 10) and 48 (SEM 5) s for the knee extension at the three MVC levels, respectively. Heart rate and blood pressure became higher during one-legged knee extension than during handgrip, and with increasing level of contraction. The older subjects had a lower heart rate and a higher blood pressure response than their younger counterparts, and the differences were more apparent at a higher force level. The results would indicate that increasing age is associated with an altered heart rate and blood pressure response to isometric exercise although it does not affect isometric endurance. Accepted: 23 October 1997  相似文献   

17.
The glycogen content was measured in biopsy sample of human vastus lateralis muscle during prolonged isometric contraction with low force generation. In the first experiment 15% of the maximum voluntary contraction force (MVC) was held for 10 min. Glycogen utilization was 68.1 mmol glucosyl units.kg-1 dry muscle (d.m.). The study was continued by intermittent contractions of 50 s duration and 10 s rest repeated for 50 min. This resulted in a total glycogen utilization of 167.5 mmol glycosyl units.kg-1 d.m. The study was repeated with a force set of 7.5% MVC starting with 20 min continuous contraction followed by the same intermittent contractions for a further 100 min. The glycogen decrease was 15 mmol after the continuous contraction and totally 50 mmol after 2 h with the lower force. Thus the glycogen degradation rate even at low contraction force was related to the force level, being 6 times higher when the force was increased from 7.5 to 15% MVC. With prolonged isometric work periods at work loads corresponding to 15% MVC or higher depletion of the glycogen store can limit work performance capacity.  相似文献   

18.
We examined muscle sympathetic nerve activity (MSNA) in thenonexercising lower limb during repetitive static quadricepscontraction paradigm at 25% maximal voluntary contraction in eightmen. Subjects performed 20-s contractions with 5-s rest periods for upto 12 contractions. Although the workload was constant, we found that MSNA amplitude rose as a function of contraction number [0.6 ln (amplitude/min)/contraction]; this suggests chemicalsensitization of the muscle reflex response. We employedsignal-averaging techniques and then integrated the data to examine theonset latency of the MSNA response as a function of the 25-scontraction-rest period. We observed an onset latency of ~4-6 s.Moreover, although the onset latency did not appear to vary as afunction of contraction number, the rate of MSNA increase tookapproximately four contractions to reach a steady-state rate of rise;this suggests contraction-induced sensitization. The onset latencyreported here is similar to findings in recent animal studies, but itis at odds with latencies determined in prior human handgripcontraction studies. We believe our data suggest that1) mechanically sensitive afferentscontribute importantly to the MSNA response to the paradigm employedand 2) these afferents may besensitized by the chemical products of muscle contraction.  相似文献   

19.
Isolated rat and mouse extensor digitorum longus (EDL) and soleus muscles were studied under isometric and isotonic conditions at temperatures from approximately 8 degrees -38 degrees C. The rate constant for the exponential rise of tension during an isometric tetanus had a Q10 of approximately 2.5 for all muscles (corresponding to an enthalpy of activation, delta H = 66 kJ/mol, if the rate was determined by a single chemical reaction). The half-contraction time, contraction time, and maximum rate of rise for tension in an isometric twitch and the maximum shortening velocity in an isotonic contraction all had a similar temperature dependence (i.e., delta H approximately 66 kJ/mol). The Mg++ ATPase rates of myofibrils prepared from rat EDL and soleus muscles had a steeper temperature dependence (delta H = 130 kJ/mol), but absolute rates at 20 degrees C were lower than the rate of rise of tension. This suggests that the Mg++ ATPase cycle rate is not limiting for force generation. A substantial fraction of cross-bridges may exist in a resting state that converts to the force-producing state at a rate faster than required to complete the cycle and repopulate the resting state. The temperature dependence for the rate constant of the exponential decay of tension during an isometric twitch or short tetanus (and the half-fall time of a twitch) had a break point at approximately 20 degrees C, with apparent enthalpy values of delta H = 117 kJ/mol below 20 degrees C and delta H = 70 kJ/mol above 20 degrees C. The break point and the values of delta H at high and low temperatures agree closely with published values for the delta H of the sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca++ ATPase. Thus, the temperature dependence for the relaxation rate of a twitch or a short tetanus is consistent with that for the reabsorption rate of Ca++ into the SR.  相似文献   

20.
This study investigated exertion-dependent motor overflow among healthy adults when they performed isometric tasks with contralateral joints in different task directions. Twenty healthy adults (10 males and 10 females, mean age = 26.2 yrs) were instructed to complete a set of isometric contractions of various force vectors with the shoulder, elbow, and wrist joints, in a total of ten motor tasks at submaximal and maximal intensities (50%, 100% maximal voluntary contractions). The electromyographical activities from eight muscles of the unexercised upper limb were recorded to characterize intensity of motor overflow during sustained isometric contraction. Both occurrence frequency and magnitude of motor overflow in terms of standardized net excitation (SNE) increased with exertion level for all joint movements (P < 0.001). Additionally, the motor overflow magnitude depended strongly on the task direction of maximal isometric contraction (P < 0.05). Motor overflow was particularly augmented by the contralateral isometric contractions where task directions were opposed to gravity. However, such a directional effect upon SNE was not evident during submaximal contraction (P > 0.05). The difference of the net excitation between maximal and submaximal contraction (DNE(100%-50%MVC) data) indicated that the pectoralis major and triceps brachii consistently exhibited a marked recruitment in reaction to change in task direction of isometric contraction. Patterned motor overflow may be physiologically relevant to topological mapping of the ipsilateral pathways and altered effectiveness of use-dependent interhemispherical connectivity. The current observations provide better insight into gain in muscle strength due to contralateral exercise.  相似文献   

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