| Literature DB >> 18386049 |
E R Mulder1, K H L Gerrits, J Rittweger, D Felsenberg, D F Stegeman, A de Haan.
Abstract
The contractile characteristics of fast voluntary and electrically evoked unilateral isometric knee extensions were followed in 16 healthy men during 56 days of horizontal bed rest and assessed at bed rest days 4, 7, 10, 17, 24, 38 and 56. Subjects were randomized to either an inactive control group (Ctrl, n = 8) or a resistive vibration exercise countermeasure group (RVE, n = 8). No changes were observed in neural activation, indicated by the amplitude of the surface electromyogram, or the initial rate of voluntary torque development in either group during bed rest. In contrast, for Ctrl, the force oscillation amplitude at 10 Hz stimulation increased by 48% (P < 0.01), the time to reach peak torque at 300 Hz stimulation decreased by 7% (P < 0.01), and the half relaxation time at 150 Hz stimulation tended to be slightly reduced by 3% (P = 0.056) after 56 days of bed rest. No changes were observed for RVE. Torque production at 10 Hz stimulation relative to maximal (150 Hz) stimulation was increased after bed rest for both Ctrl (15%; P < 0.05) and RVE (41%; P < 0.05). In conclusion, bed rest without exercise countermeasure resulted in intrinsic speed properties of a faster knee extensor group, which may have partly contributed to the preserved ability to perform fast voluntary contractions. The changes in intrinsic contractile properties were prevented by resistive vibration exercise, and voluntary motor performance remained unaltered for RVE subjects as well.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18386049 PMCID: PMC2358938 DOI: 10.1007/s00421-008-0724-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Appl Physiol ISSN: 1439-6319 Impact factor: 3.078
Fig. 1Voluntary torque (thick line) and rectified surface EMG of the vastus lateralis muscle (thin line) time traces, obtained from a representative subject during an isometric voluntary knee extension performed as fast and forcefully as possible. The arrow and diamond at time 0 ms indicate the start of voluntary torque development. The shaded area under the voluntary torque trace reflects the vTTI40, calculated the first 40 ms after onset of torque development. The horizontal bar indicates the 40 ms immediately preceding the onset of torque development (i.e., from −40 to 0 ms) for which the root mean square (RMS) of the surface EMG was calculated. Subsequently, both vTTI40 and RMS−40–0 were normalized to the steady state maximal isometric knee extension condition at the day of testing
Fig. 2Methods used for evaluation of contractile properties of the quadriceps femoris muscle evoked by electrically evoked muscle stimulation at 10 Hz. The torque elicited at 10 Hz stimulation was first expressed as a percentage of the maximal torque evoked at 150 Hz (T150). T10 was the peak value of the 10 Hz torque trace. The force oscillation amplitude (FOA) was determined by expressing the mean amplitude of the torque oscillation (Os) between the fourth and seventh stimulus as a fraction of the mean torque (Tm) during this time
Fig. 3Mean values (±SE) of the voluntary time torque integral over the first 40 ms (TTI40) after torque development (vTTI; a) and the sEMG amplitude 40 ms before the onset of torque development (RMS; b) obtained during 56 days of bed rest (BR). For each session, both vTTI40 and RMS−40–0 are expressed as a percentage of the corresponding values at the steady-state maximal voluntary torque (MVT) of that session
Fig. 4Mean values (±SE) of the force oscillation amplitude (FOA; a) time to peak tension at 300 Hz stimulation (TPT; b), half relaxation time at 150 Hz stimulation (HRT), and peak torque at 10 Hz stimulation expressed as a fraction of the maximal torque obtained during tetanic stimulation at 150 Hz (T/T) obtained during 56 days of bed rest (BR)