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Unilateral elbow flexion fatigue modulates corticospinal responsiveness in non‐fatigued contralateral biceps brachii
Author(s) -
Aboodarda S. J.,
Šambaher N.,
Behm D. G.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
scandinavian journal of medicine and science in sports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.575
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1600-0838
pISSN - 0905-7188
DOI - 10.1111/sms.12596
Subject(s) - biceps , isometric exercise , medicine , transcranial magnetic stimulation , muscle fatigue , physical medicine and rehabilitation , elbow flexion , electromyography , elbow , stimulation , cardiology , anesthesia , physical therapy , anatomy
Exercise‐induced fatigue can change motor performance in non‐exercised muscles. The objective was to investigate unilateral elbow flexion ( EF ) fatigue effects on the maximal voluntary force ( MVC ) and corticospinal excitability of contralateral non‐exercised biceps brachii ( BB ). Transcranial magnetic, transmastoid electrical, and brachial plexus electrical stimulation were used to elicit motor evoked potentials ( MEP ), cervicomedullary motor evoked potentials ( CMEP ), and compound muscle action potentials in the contralateral non‐exercised BB of 12 participants before and after (i) two bouts of 100‐s unilateral EF (fatigue) or (ii) control. Three stimuli were evoked every 1.5 s during a series of 6‐s isometric EF at 100%, 50%, and 5% of MVC . The non‐exercised EF MVC force, electromyographic activity, and voluntary activation were not significantly different between fatigue and control. Non‐exercised BB MEP and CMEP amplitudes during 100% MVCs demonstrated significantly higher ( P = 0.03) and lower values ( P = 0.01), respectively, after fatigue compared with control. There was no difference between the two conditions for MEP and CMEP amplitudes during 50% and 5% MVCs . Unilateral exercise‐induced EF fatigue did not lead to cross‐over central fatigue to the contralateral homologous muscle but enhanced the supraspinal responsiveness ( MEP / CMEP ) of the neural circuitries supplying central commands to non‐exercised muscles at higher contraction intensity.