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1.
Fatiguing contractions of the adductor pollicis muscle were produced by intermittent supramaximal stimulation of the ulnar nerve in a set frequency pattern, in six normal subjects. At the end of an initial fatiguing contraction series, low frequency fatigue (LFF) had been induced and persisted at 15 min of recovery. Stimulated fatiguing activity was then repeated in an identical fashion to the initial series. At high frequencies, declines in force were similar for both series. At low frequencies, declines in force were greater during the second series despite similar changes in compound muscle action potential amplitude. This confirmation that LFF persists during subsequent stimulated activity, and reduces low but not high frequency fatigue resistance, suggests that the impaired endurance of fatigued muscle during voluntary activity primarily results from peripheral changes at low frequency. These findings also have implications for therapeutic electrical stimulation of muscle.  相似文献   

2.
During volitional muscle activation, motor units often fire with varying discharge patterns that include brief, high-frequency bursts of activity. These variations in the activation rate allow the central nervous system to precisely control the forces produced by the muscle. The present study explores how varying the instantaneous frequency of stimulation pulses within a train affects nonisometric muscle performance. The peak excursion produced in response to each stimulation train was considered as the primary measure of muscle performance. The results showed that at each frequency tested between 10 and 50 Hz, variable-frequency trains that took advantage of the catchlike property of skeletal muscle produced greater excursions than constant-frequency trains. In addition, variable-frequency trains that could achieve targeted trajectories with fewer pulses than constant-frequency trains were identified. These findings suggest that similar to voluntary muscle activation patterns, varying the instantaneous frequency within a train of pulses can be used to improve muscle performance during functional electrical stimulation.  相似文献   

3.
We previously reported the development of a force- and fatigue-model system that predicted accurately forces during repetitive fatiguing activation of human skeletal muscles using brief duration (six-pulse) stimulation trains. The model system was tested in the present study using force responses produced by longer duration stimulation trains, containing up to 50 pulses. Our results showed that our model successfully predicted the peak forces produced when the muscle was repetitively activated with stimulation trains of frequencies ranging from 20 to 40 Hz, train durations ranging from 0.5 to 1 s, and varied pulse patterns. The predicted peak forces throughout each protocol matched the experimental peak forces with r2 values above 0.9 and predicted successfully the forces at the end of each protocol with <15% error for all protocols tested. The success of our model system further supports its potential use for the design of optimal stimulation patterns for individual users during functional electrical stimulation.  相似文献   

4.
During functional electrical stimulation (FES), both the frequency and intensity can be increased to increase muscle force output and counteract the effects of muscle fatigue. Most current FES systems, however, deliver a constant frequency and only vary the stimulation intensity to control muscle force. This study compared muscle performance and fatigue produced during repetitive electrical stimulation using three different strategies: (1) constant pulse-duration and stepwise increases in frequency (frequency-modulation); (2) constant frequency and stepwise increases in pulse-duration (pulse-duration-modulation); and (3) constant frequency and pulse-duration (no-modulation). Surface electrical stimulation was delivered to the quadriceps femoris muscles of 12 healthy individuals and isometric forces were recorded. Muscle performance was assessed by measuring the percent changes in the peak forces and force-time integrals between the first and the last fatiguing trains. Muscle fatigue was assessed by measuring percent declines in peak force between the 60Hz pre- and post-fatigue testing trains. The results showed that frequency-modulation showed better performance for both peak forces and force-time integrals in response to the fatiguing trains than pulse-duration-modulation, while producing similar levels of muscle fatigue. Although frequency-modulation is not commonly used during FES, clinicians should consider this strategy to improve muscle performance.  相似文献   

5.
The purpose of this paper was to determine the effects of stimulation pattern and frequency on repetitive human knee movements. Quadriceps femoris muscles were stimulated against a load equal to 10% of each subject's maximum voluntary isometric force. The main variable of interest was the number of repetitions in which the leg reached a target angle of 40 degrees of knee extension. Sixteen different trains were tested, including 1) six constant-frequency trains with frequencies ranging from 9 to 100 Hz, 2) five variable-frequency trains with an initial 5-ms triplet and mean frequencies ranging from 11 to 35 Hz, and 3) five doublet-frequency trains, which used doublets (2 pulses with a 5-ms interpulse interval) to replace single pulses, with mean frequencies of 17-57 Hz. Testing was stopped when the subject failed to reach the target angle for three consecutive activations. Results showed that no single pattern was best for all subjects. The 33- and 100-Hz constant-frequency trains, 35-Hz variable-frequency trains, and 27- and 36-Hz doublet frequency trains each met the target the most times for some subjects. The results showed that, under our testing conditions, higher frequency trains were better suited for producing repetitive knee movements than lower frequency trains.  相似文献   

6.
The effect of stimulation frequency on twitch force potentiation was examined in the adductor pollicis muscle of ten normal subjects. The ulnar nerve was supramaximally stimulated at the wrist and isometric twitch force was measured from a 3-Hz train lasting 1 s. Test stimulation frequencies of 5, 10, 20, 25, 30, 40, 50 and 100 Hz were applied for 5 s each in random order (5 min apart) and the twitches (3 Hz) were applied immediately before and after (1 s) the test frequency and at intervals up to 5 min afterwards (10 s, and 1, 2 and 5 min). Poststimulation twitches were expressed as a percentage of the prestimulation twitch. Low frequency fatigue was not induced by the protocol since the 20:50 Hz ratio did not alter within each session. The degree of twitch potentiation was frequency dependent, with potentiation increasing up to 50 Hz [mean 173 (SD 16)%] but the effect was markedly less at 100 Hz [mean 133 (SD 25)%, P less than 0.01] for all subjects. The reduced potentiation at 100 Hz may have occurred due to high frequency fatigue produced by the 100-Hz test stimulation train. The optimal frequency of those examined in the experimental group was 50 Hz but this only produced maximal potentiation in six of the ten subjects and 100 Hz always produced less potentiation. These findings have implications for electrical stimulation of muscle in the clinical setting.  相似文献   

7.
Skeletal muscle fatigue in vitro is temperature dependent   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Our purpose was to determine the effect of temperature on the fatigability of isolated soleus and extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscles from rats during repeated isometric contractions. Muscles (70-90 mg) were studied at 20-40 degrees C in vitro. Fatigability was defined with respect to both the time and number of stimuli required to reach 50% of the force (P) developed at the onset of the fatigue test. Fatigue was studied during stimulation protocols of variable [force approximately 70% of maximum force (Po)] and constant frequency (28 Hz). Results for soleus and EDL muscles were qualitatively similar, but fatigue times were longer for soleus than for EDL muscles. During the variable-frequency protocol, development of approximately 70% of Po required an increase in stimulation frequency as temperature increased. During stimulation at these frequencies, fatigue time shortened as temperature increased. For both fatigue protocols, the relationship between temperature and the number of stimuli required to reach fatigue followed a bell-shaped curve, with maximum values at 25-30 degrees C. The temperature optimum for maximizing the number of isometric contractions to reach fatigue reflects direct effects of temperature on muscle function.  相似文献   

8.
Interaction of fatigue and hypercapnia in the canine diaphragm   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
We studied 10 open-chest dogs and measured the pressure across the diaphragm (Pdi) in each period of the protocol during stimulation at frequencies of 1, 20, 50, and 80 Hz. Three ranges of arterial PCO2 (PaCO2) were examined: less than or equal to 26, 36-50, and greater than or equal to 89 Torr. The diaphragm was fatigued with repetitive phrenic stimulation (30 Hz). During the fatiguing activity, five of the animals were subjected to hypercapnia and the other five to hypocapnia. A frequency-Pdi curve was generated for each period in the protocol. The data show that 1) fatiguing to 50% of the initial Pdi value during hypercapnia was significantly more rapid than during hypocapnia; 2) both the prefatigue and postfatigue mean Pdi values over all interactions of frequency, fatigue, and PaCO2 were unaffected by the fatiguing environment (hypercapnia vs. hypocapnia); 3) the percent reduction of Pdi by hypercapnia was the same at all four frequencies; 4) hypocapnia did not alter either the pre- or postfatigue frequency-Pdi curve; and 5) one-half relaxation time, unaffected by PaCO2, was prolonged by fatigue. We conclude that the hypercapnic diaphragm has less endurance than the hypocapnic diaphragm and that although both fatigue and hypercapnia decrease Pdi, they appear to be separate entities working through different mechanisms.  相似文献   

9.
We examined the effect of an age-related leftward shift in the force-frequency relationship on the comparative quadriceps fatigability of nine young (27 +/- 1 yr old) and nine old men (78 +/- 1 yr old) during low-frequency electrical stimulation. Two different protocols of intermittent trains (6 pulses on, 650 ms off) of electrical stimulation at 25% maximum voluntary contraction were performed by both groups: 1) 180 trains at 14.3 Hz [constant frequency (CF) protocol], and 2) 180 trains at the frequency corresponding to 60% of each subject's force-frequency curve [normalized frequency (NF) protocol; young 14.9 +/- 0.4 vs. old 12.7 +/- 0.5 Hz; P < 0.05]. The quadriceps of the old men were weaker (approximately 31%) and relaxation was slower compared with the young men, as assessed by the maximal relaxation rate constant of the 50-Hz tetanus (young 12.1 +/- 0.2 vs. old 9.2 +/- 0.5 s(-1); P < 0.05) and a leftward shift in the force-frequency relationship. The NF protocol revealed a decreased fatigability in the quadriceps with old age (percentage of 1st contraction force remaining at 180th: old 63.4 +/- 1.5 vs. young 58.2 +/- 1.7%; P < 0.05) that was masked during the CF protocol (old 60.7 +/- 1.6 vs. young 58.6 +/- 2.3%; P > 0.05). Irrespective of the protocol, the maximal relaxation rate was reduced to approximately 73 and approximately 57% of the prefatigue value in the young and old men, respectively. The age-related leftward shift in the force-frequency relationship of the quadriceps contributed to an underestimation of the fatigue resistance with old age during the CF protocol. However, when the stimulation frequency used in the NF protocol was adjusted to account for the age-related shift in the force-frequency relationship, the quadriceps muscles of the old men were less fatigable than those of the young men. Thus we suggest that whole muscle fatigability is better examined by electrical stimulation protocols that are adjusted for inter- and intragroup differences in the force-frequency relationship.  相似文献   

10.
Stimulation trains that exploit the catchlike property [catchlike-inducing trains (CITs)] produce greater forces and rates of rise of force than do constant-frequency trains (CFTs) during isometric contractions and isovelocity movements. This study examined the effect of CITs during isotonic contractions in healthy subjects. Knee extension was electrically elicited against a load of 10% of maximum voluntary isometric contraction. The stimulation intensity was set to produce 20% of maximum voluntary isometric contraction. The muscle was tested before and after fatigue with a 6-pulse CFT and 6-pulse CITs that contained an initial doublet, triplet, or quadruplet. For prefatigue responses, the greatest isotonic performance was produced by CITs with initial doublets. When the muscles were fatigued, triplet CITs were best. CITs produce greater excursion, work, peak power, and average power than do CFTs, because CITs produced more rapid rates of rise of force. Faster rates of rise of force enabled the preload on the muscle to be exceeded earlier during the stimulation train.  相似文献   

11.
We studied fatigue of rat diaphragm in response to repetitive brief and prolonged electrical stimulation of the phrenic nerve, at 0.2, 1-100 Hz. Low and high frequency of stimulation produced twitch and tetanic contractions in the rat diaphragm. A mean maximum twitch tension of 1.4 +/- 0.1 g was produced at 1 Hz, and a mean maximum tetanic tension of 5.6 +/- 0.3 g was obtained at 100 Hz (means +/- S.E., n = 8). Twitch and tetanic fatigue was produced at all frequencies of stimulations, but with different time scale, or duration, and with different number of stimuli delivered to the muscle. At low rates of stimulation, e.g. 10 Hz, fewer stimuli were needed to fatigue the muscle (3000 in 5 min), whereas at high rates of stimulation, e.g. 50 Hz, more stimuli were needed to fatigue the muscle (6600 in 2.2 min). The amplitude of the tetanic tensions elicited at 10 and 50 Hz, at the end of 5 or 2 min fatiguing stimulation, was 39 +/- 2.7% and 80 +/- 3.1% of their respective control tensions (2.8 +/- 0 2 g and 5.3 +/- 0.5 g, n = 8, P 0.001). It was concluded that fatigue in the rat diaphragm depended on the frequency and duration of stimulation as well as on the number of stimuli delivered to the muscle. Various mechanisms of muscle fatigue are described in the discussion to explain the observations made in the present investigation.  相似文献   

12.
We studied the effects of intravenously administered terbutaline on diaphragmatic force and fatigue during electrical stimulation of the diaphragm in 17 anesthetized dogs. The diaphragm was stimulated indirectly through the phrenic nerves with electrodes placed around the fifth roots and directly with electrodes surgically implanted in the abdominal side of each hemidiaphragm. Transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi) during direct or indirect supramaximal 2-s stimulation applied over a frequency range of 10-100 Hz was measured with balloon catheters during tracheal occlusion at functional residual capacity. In seven dogs the administration of terbutaline (0.5 mg) had no effect on Pdi at any stimulation frequency applied directly or indirectly. The effect of terbutaline (0.5 mg) on diaphragmatic fatigue was then tested in 10 other dogs. Diaphragmatic fatigue was produced by continuous 20-Hz electrical supramaxial stimulation of the phrenic nerves during 30 min. At the end of the fatigue procedure Pdi decreased by 50 +/- 5 and 30 +/- 8% of control values at 10 and 100 Hz, respectively, for either direct or indirect stimulation. The decrease in Pdi for low frequencies of stimulation (10 and 20 Hz) lasted 100 +/- 18 min, whereas it lasted only 40 +/- 10 min for the high frequencies (50 and 100 Hz). When terbutaline (0.5 mg) was administered after the fatiguing procedure, Pdi increased within 15 min by 20 +/- 4% at 10 Hz and by 12 +/- 3% at 100 Hz for either direct or indirect stimulation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

13.
The 24 h recovery pattern of contractile properties of the triceps surae muscle, following a period of muscle fatigue, was compared in physically active young (25 years, n = 10) and elderly (66 years, n = 7) men. The fatigue test protocol consisted of 10 min of intermittent submaximal 20 Hz tetani. The maximal twitch (Pt) and tetanic force at 3 frequencies (10, 20 and 50 Hz) were determined at baseline and at 15 min, 1, 4 and 24 h after fatiguing the muscle. Maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) and vertical jump (MVJ) were also assessed. The loss of force during the fatigue test was not significantly different between the young (18 +/- 13%) and elderly (22 +/- 15%). Both groups showed similar and significant reductions of Pt (15%), tetanic force (10 to 35%) and rate of force development (dp/dt) (20%) 15 min and 1 h into recovery. The loss of force was greater at the lower stimulation frequencies of 10 and 20 Hz. Time-to-peak tension was unchanged from baseline during recovery in either group. The average rate of relaxation of twitch force (-dPt/dt) was decreased (p less than 0.05) and half-relaxation time significantly increased at 15 min and 1 h in the elderly but not the young. The findings indicate that after fatiguing contractions, elderly muscle demonstrates a slower return to resting levels of the rate and time course of twitch relaxation compared to the young.  相似文献   

14.
Single motor unit and fiber action potentials during fatigue   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
Muscle fatigue is defined as a loss of tension development during constant stimulation. Although the relationship is not well documented, muscle fatigue has been inferred from electromyogram (EMG) signals. The purpose of this study was to determine the relationship between the amplitude and duration of single motor unit action potentials (MUAPs) and the loss of tension development (fatigue) in the medial gastrocnemius muscles of cats. Single motor units were fatigued by continuous stimulation at 10 or 80 Hz or with trains of 40-Hz stimuli. When motor units were stimulated at 10 Hz and with trains at 40 Hz (low frequency), tension declined and remained depressed during recovery. The changes in the MUAP correlated poorly with changes in tension. During and after stimulation at 80 Hz (high frequency), changes in the amplitude and duration of MUAPs correlated highly with changes in tension development. Since the EMG signal is dependent on a summation and cancellation of individual MUAPs, the EMG provides a reasonable estimate of high-frequency fatigue but an unreliable measure of low-frequency fatigue.  相似文献   

15.
Increasing stimulation frequency has been shown to increase fatigue but not when the changes in force associated with changes in frequency have been controlled. An effect of frequency, independent of force, may be associated with the metabolic cost resulting from the additional activations. Here, two separate experiments were performed on human medial gastrocnemius muscles. The first experiment (n = 8) was designed to test the effect of the number of pulses on fatigue. The declines in force during two repetitive, 150-train stimulation protocols that produced equal initial forces, one using 80-Hz trains and the other using 100-Hz trains, were compared. Despite a difference of 600 pulses (23.5%), the protocols produced similar rates and amounts of fatigue. In the second experiment, designed to test the effect of the number of pulses on the metabolic cost of contraction, 31P-NMR spectra were collected (n = 6) during two ischemic, eight-train stimulation protocols (80- and 100-Hz) that produced comparable forces despite a difference of 320 pulses (24.8%). No differences were found in the changes in P(i) concentration, phosphocreatine concentration, and intracellular pH or in the ATP turnover produced by the two trains. These results suggest that the effect of stimulation frequency on fatigue is related to the force produced, rather than to the number of activations. In addition, within the range of frequencies tested, increasing total activations did not increase metabolic cost.  相似文献   

16.
The mechanical efficiency of rat cardiac muscle was determined using a contraction protocol involving cyclical, sinusoidal length changes and phasic stimulation at physiological frequencies (1-4 Hz). Experiments were performed in vitro (27 degrees C) using rat left ventricular papillary muscles. Efficiency was determined from measurements of the net work performed and enthalpy produced by muscles during a series of 40 contractions. Net mechanical efficiency was defined as the percentage of the total, suprabasal enthalpy output that appeared as mechanical work. Maximum efficiency was approximately 15% at contraction frequencies between 2 and 2.5 Hz. At lower and higher frequencies, efficiency was approximately 10%. Enthalpy output per cycle was independent of cycle frequency at all but the highest frequency used. The basis of the high efficiency between 2 and 2.5 Hz was that work output was also greatest at these frequencies. At these frequencies, the duration of the applied length change was well matched to the kinetics of force generation, and active force generation occurred throughout the shortening period.  相似文献   

17.
The role of muscle potentiation in overcoming low-frequency fatigue (LFF) as it developed during submaximal voluntary exercise was investigated in eight males (age 26.4 +/- 0.7 years, mean +/- SE) performing isometric leg extension at approximately 30% of maximal voluntary contraction for 60 min using a 0.5-duty cycle (1 s contraction, 1 s rest). At 5, 20, 40, and 60 min, exercise was interrupted for 3 min, and the maximum positive rate of force development (+dF/dtmax) and maximal twitch force (Pt) were measured in maximal twitch contractions at 0, 1, 2, and 3 min of rest (R0, R1, R2, R3); they were also measured at 15 min of recovery following the entire 60-min exercise period. These measures were compared with pre-exercise (PRE) as an indicator of potentiation. Force at low frequency (10 Hz) was also measured at R0, R1, R2, and R3, and at 15 min of recovery, while force at high frequency (100 Hz) was measured only at R0 and R3 and in recovery. Voluntary exercise increased twitch +dF/dtmax at R0 following 5, 20, 40, and 60 min of exercise, from 2553 +/- 150 N/s at PRE to 39%, 41%, 42%, and 36% above PRE, respectively (P<0.005). Twitch +dF/dtmax decayed at brief rest (R3) following 20, 40, and 60 min of exercise (P<0.05). Pt at R0 following 5 and 20 min of exercise was above that at PRE (P<0.05), indicating that during the early phase of moderate-intensity repetitive exercise, potentiation occurs in the relative absence of LFF. At 40 and 60 min of exercise, Pt at R0 was unchanged from PRE. The LFF (10 Hz) induced by the protocol was evident at 40 and 60 min (R0-R3; P<0.05) and at 15 min following exercise (P<0.05). High-frequency force was not significantly compromised by the protocol. Since twitch force was maintained, these results suggest that as exercise progresses, LFF develops, which can be compensated for by potentiation.  相似文献   

18.
Neuromuscular transmission was studied in diaphragms from rats of three ages, 4-7 days old, 11-12 days old, and adults with the use of an in vitro phrenic nerve-hemidiaphragm preparation. Each hemidiaphragm was stimulated via either muscle or nerve with 1-s stimulus trains at frequencies from 10 to 100 Hz. The patterns of force development obtained in response to the two routes of stimulation were compared for each group. Diaphragms from adults developed maximum force in response to stimulation of approximately 40 Hz with no significant decrease in force at higher frequencies. Within each stimulus train, once peak force was achieved, it was maintained for the remainder of the stimulus and responses to nerve and muscle stimulation were almost identical. In contrast, diaphragms from 4- to 7-day-old rats developed maximum force at approximately 20 Hz; stimulation at greater than or equal to 60 Hz induced significantly less peak force. This decrease in peak force at higher frequencies was significantly larger for nerve than for muscle stimulation. In addition, during each nerve stimulus train diaphragms from 4- to 7-day-old rats were unable to maintain peak force, which decreased at frequencies greater than 20 Hz. The decrease in force reached approximately 50% of peak at stimulation frequencies greater than or equal to 60 Hz. Diaphragms from 11- to 12-day-old rats showed intermediate responses. Based on the responses to phrenic nerve stimulation, we conclude that the neonatal rat diaphragm shows marked neuromuscular transmission failure that is not seen in the adult.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

19.
It is well accepted that a low intensity/long duration isometric contraction induces more low frequency fatigue (LFF) compared to a high-intensity/short-duration contraction. However, previous reports examined the intensity/duration of the contraction but did not control the level of fatigue when concluding fatigue is task dependent. The purpose of this study was to determine whether a long duration/low intensity fatiguing contraction would induce greater LFF than a short duration/high-intensity contraction when the quadriceps muscle was fatigued to similar levels. Eighteen healthy male subjects performed quadriceps contractions sustained at 35% and 65% of maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) on separate days, until the tasks induced a similar amount of fatigue (force generating capacity=45% MVC). Double pulse torque to single pulse torque ratio (D/S ratio) was obtained before, immediately and 5min after fatigue along with the electromyographic (EMG) signal from vastus medialis (VM) and rectus femoris (RF). The D/S ratio significantly (p<0.05) increased by 8.7+/-8.5% (mean+/-SD) and 10.2+/-9.2% after 35% and 65% tasks, respectively, and remained elevated 5min into recovery; however, there was no significant difference in ratio between the two sessions immediately or 5min post-fatigue (p>0.05) even though the endurance time for the 35% fatigue task (124+/-39.68s) was significantly longer (p=0.05) than that of the 65% task (63+/-17.73s). EMG amplitude and median power frequency (MPF) analysis also did not reveal any significant differences between these two sessions after fatigue. These findings indicate that LFF fatigue is fatigue dependent as well as task intensity/duration dependent. These findings assist us in understanding task dependency and muscle fatigue.  相似文献   

20.
To determine the skeletal muscle stimulation parameters that are most important in establishing vasodilation in the microvasculature, I tested whether arteriolar diameter during 2 min of repetitive, short-duration, tetanic skeletal muscle contractions increased with changes in stimulus frequency, stimulation train duration, and contraction frequency. To test this, the diameter of transverse arterioles approximately perpendicular to small bundles of cremaster muscle fibers in situ of anesthetized Golden Syrian hamsters was used as a bioassay system. Arteriolar diameter was measured before and during different stimulation patterns that consisted of a contraction frequency [6, 12, or 24 contractions per minute (cpm)], a stimulation train duration (250, 500, or 750 ms) and a stimulus frequency (4, 8, 10, 15, 20, 30, 40, 60, and 80 Hz). The magnitude of the dilation significantly increased with stimulus frequency but not in a simple linear manner. The average rate of increase was 0.32 +/- 0.02 microm/Hz from 4 to 20 Hz and 0.09 +/- 0.02 microm/Hz from 30 to 80 Hz. The magnitude of the dilation increased significantly with the contraction frequency where the dilation at 6 cpm was significantly smaller than the dilation at 24 cpm across all stimulus frequencies. Changing the train duration from 250 to 750 ms did not significantly affect the magnitude of the dilation. These observations suggest that stimulation parameters are important in determining the magnitude of the microvascular dilation and that the magnitude of the dilation was dependent on both the contraction frequency and stimulus frequency but was independent of train duration.  相似文献   

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