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J Neurophysiol 73: 2195-2206, 1995;
0022-3077/95 $5.00
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Journal of Neurophysiology, Vol 73, Issue 6 2195-2206, Copyright © 1995 by APS


ARTICLES

Fatigability, relaxation properties, and electromyographic responses of the human paralyzed soleus muscle

R. K. Shields
College of Medicine, Physical Therapy Graduate Program, University of Iowa, Iowa City 52242-1008, USA.

1. The goal of this study was to characterize the fatigability, contractile relaxation properties, electrophysiological responses, and histochemical properties of the human paralyzed soleus muscle to determine its relative plasticity. 2. Acute (< 6 wk, n = 3) and chronic (> 1 yr, n = 10) paralyzed individuals had the tibial nerve activated with a 20-Hz square wave delivered for 330 ms every second for 4 min. The soleus muscle peak torque, one-half relaxation time (1/2RT), normalized maximum rate of relaxation (nMRR), and mass muscle action-potential amplitude (M wave) were computed every 30 s. A soleus muscle biopsy was evaluated for myosin adenosine triphosphatase enzyme (ATPase; pH 9.4, 4.6, and 4.2) and nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide tetrazolium reductase (NADH-TR). 3. In the chronically paralyzed group the torque was significantly reduced within 30 s of the fatigue protocol. The 1/2RT and nMRR were also significantly changed within 30 s, supporting that muscle relaxation was prolonged. No significant changes were present at comparable times during the same 4-min fatigue protocol applied to the acutely paralyzed soleus muscle. M-wave amplitude was significantly reduced in the chronic group, but only at 3 min of the fatigue protocol. Conversely, no significant changes occurred to the M waves of the acute group. 4. The correlation was high between torque and nMRR (r = 0.88-0.97) and torque and 1/2RT (r = 0.88-0.96) for each chronic subject. A close association was also found between 1/2RT and nMRR (r = 0.88-0.92) for each chronic subject. Because these variables changed minimally in the acutely paralyzed group, a lower correlation was present (r = 0.45-0.52). 5. Torque was weakly correlated to M-wave amplitude (r = 0.55) for the chronically paralyzed group. The greatest change in torque occurred at a time (0-65 s) when the least amount of change occurred in the M-wave amplitude, suggesting that the source of fatigue was within the contractile mechanism and not attributable to neuromuscular transmission compromise. 6. Despite a close association between torque and relaxation properties during fatigue of the chronically paralyzed soleus muscle, there was a significant dissociation after 5 min of recovery. Torque recovered to 60%, whereas the relaxation properties were consistently fully recovered. This suggests that the mechanism causing torque reduction covaried with the mechanism leading to prolonged relaxation during fatigue, but during recovery the two mechanisms no longer covaried. M-wave amplitude was also completely recovered at 5 min despite continued torque depression.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)


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