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MECHANISMS OF FATIGUE INDUCED BY ISOMETRIC CONTRACTIONS IN EXERCISING HUMANS AND IN MOUSE ISOLATED SINGLE MUSCLE FIBRES
Author(s) -
Place Nicolas,
Bruton Joseph D,
Westerblad Håkan
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
clinical and experimental pharmacology and physiology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.752
H-Index - 103
eISSN - 1440-1681
pISSN - 0305-1870
DOI - 10.1111/j.1440-1681.2008.05021.x
Subject(s) - isometric exercise , muscle fatigue , myofilament , contraction (grammar) , muscle contraction , excitation–contraction coupling , stimulation , medicine , biophysics , coupling (piping) , chemistry , myocyte , physical medicine and rehabilitation , materials science , electromyography , biology , metallurgy
SUMMARY1 Muscle fatigue (i.e. the decrease in muscle performance during exercise) has been studied extensively using a variety of experimental paradigms, from mouse to human, from single cell to whole‐body exercise. Given the disparity of models used to characterize muscle fatigue, it can be difficult to establish whether the results of basic in vitro studies are applicable to exercise in humans. 2 In the present brief review, our attempt is to relate neuromuscular alterations caused by repeated or sustained isometric contraction in humans to changes in excitation–contraction (E‐C) coupling observed in intact single muscle fibres, where force and the free myoplasmic [Ca 2+ ] can be measured. 3 Accumulated data indicate that impairment of E‐C coupling, most likely located within muscle fibres, accounts for the fatigue‐induced decrease in maximal force in humans, whereas central (neural) fatigue is of greater importance for the inability to continue a sustained low‐intensity contraction. Based on data from intact single muscle fibres, the fatigue‐induced impairment in E‐C coupling involves: (i) a reduced number of active cross‐bridges owing to a decreased release of Ca 2+ ; (ii) a decreased sensitivity of the myofilaments to Ca 2+ ; and/or (iii) a reduced force produced by each active cross‐bridge. 4 In conclusion, data from single muscle fibre studies can be used to increase our understanding of fatigue mechanisms in some, but not all, types of human exercise. To further increase the understanding of fatigue mechanisms in humans, we propose future studies using in vitro stimulation patterns that are closer to the in vivo situation.

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