Literature DB >> 2676557

Skeletal muscle disorders and associated factors that limit exercise performance.

S F Lewis, R G Haller.   

Abstract

The study of skeletal muscle disorders is providing potentially important insights into regulatory mechanisms in human exercise and fatigue and information useful for diagnostic and treatment purposes. This review primarily concerned the general metabolic and physiological factors which set upper limits to performance of various types of exercise in patients with a variety of muscle disorders. From the standpoint of exercise performance, skeletal muscle diseases can be classified into three major groups. One group consists of primary disorders of muscle energy metabolism, including defects in muscle carbohydrate and lipid metabolism, disorders of mitochondrial electron transport, and abnormalities of purine nucleotide metabolism. Exercise performance largely reflects the capacity for ATP resynthesis. Oxidative phosphorylation is the dominant quantitative source of energy for ATP resynthesis under most exercise conditions. Consequently, patients with disordered oxidative metabolism (i.e., patients with defects in the availability or utilization of oxidizable substrate, such as those with phosphorylase or PFK deficiency or those with defects in mitochondrial electron transport) typically demonstrate severely impaired exercise performance. Intolerance to sustained exercise and premature fatigability are salient features of muscle oxidative disorders. Maximal oxygen uptake and maximal a-v O2 difference are markedly subnormal related to an attenuated muscle oxygen extraction. Muscle weakness and atrophy are less common. Anaerobic muscle performance is dramatically limited in patients with virtually complete defects of glycogenolysis/glycolysis but appears relatively normal in those with electron transport defects. A second major group of disorders includes patients with decreased muscle mass due to muscle necrosis, atrophy, and replacement of muscle by fat and connective tissue. These disorders are exemplified by the various muscular dystrophies (Duchenne's dystrophy, Becker's dystrophy, LG dystrophy, FSH dystrophy, and myotonic dystrophy) in which exercise performance is severely impaired due to muscle wasting and weakness in spite of largely normal pathways for muscle ATP resynthesis. In muscular dystrophy patients, the degree to which maximal oxygen uptake and anaerobic muscle performance are impaired appears to be a function of the severity of muscle weakness and atrophy. A third group of disorders includes patients with impaired activation of muscle contraction or relaxation. These disorders may be considered in two subcategories. In the first, impaired activation or relaxation of contractile activity is due to intrinsic muscle dysfunction (e.g., diseases associated with myotonia or periodic paralysis). In the second subcategory, there is impaired muscle activation due to a primary abnormality in the central nervous system, motor nerves, or neuromuscular junction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)

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Year:  1989        PMID: 2676557

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Exerc Sport Sci Rev        ISSN: 0091-6331            Impact factor:   6.230


  11 in total

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2.  Contribution of energy systems during a Wingate power test.

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3.  Coincidental changes in ventilation and electromyographic activity during consecutive incremental exercise tests.

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4.  Metabolic syndrome and obesity in an insect.

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5.  Exercise stress testing in children with metabolic or neuromuscular disorders.

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Journal:  Int J Pediatr       Date:  2010-07-15

6.  Deficiency of skeletal muscle succinate dehydrogenase and aconitase. Pathophysiology of exercise in a novel human muscle oxidative defect.

Authors:  R G Haller; K G Henriksson; L Jorfeldt; E Hultman; R Wibom; K Sahlin; N H Areskog; M Gunder; K Ayyad; C G Blomqvist
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7.  Loss of positive allosteric interactions between neuronal nitric oxide synthase and phosphofructokinase contributes to defects in glycolysis and increased fatigability in muscular dystrophy.

Authors:  Michelle Wehling-Henricks; Meredith Oltmann; Chiara Rinaldi; Kyu H Myung; James G Tidball
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8.  Absence of aquaporin-4 in skeletal muscle alters proteins involved in bioenergetic pathways and calcium handling.

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9.  Tourniquet-induced tissue hypoxia characterized by near-infrared spectroscopy during ankle surgery: an observational study.

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10.  Prediction of the Wingate anaerobic mechanical power outputs from a maximal incremental cardiopulmonary exercise stress test using machine-learning approach.

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