Prasartwuth O, Allen T J, Butler J E, Gandevia S C, Taylor J L
Prince of Wales Medical Research Institute, University of New South Wales, Barker Street, Randwick, Sydney, NSW 2031, Australia.
J Physiol. 2006 Feb 15;571(Pt 1):243-52. doi: 10.1113/jphysiol.2005.101600. Epub 2005 Dec 15.
To assess the contribution of central and peripheral factors to changes in maximum voluntary force and its length dependence after eccentric muscle damage, voluntary and twitch torque were measured across a wide angular range, along with voluntary activation using twitch interpolation. Isometric torque from both maximum voluntary contractions (MVCs) and paired twitches to motor nerve stimulation were measured from 60 to 150 deg elbow flexion in 10 deg increments in eight subjects. Optimal angles were determined by curve fitting. Each subject then performed eccentric contractions until voluntary torque had decreased by approximately 40%. Measurements were repeated at 2 h, 1 day and 8 days post-exercise to follow acute and longer-term changes. Before exercise, the optimal angle was in the mid-range (93+/-10 deg; mean+/-s.d.) for MVCs, and at a more extended elbow angle for the twitch (106+/-6 deg, P < 0.05). Voluntary activation was generally high (> 94%) but depended on elbow angle, with activation being approximately 4% lower at the most flexed compared to the most extended angle. Two hours after exercise, MVCs decreased 40%, while twitch torque declined 70%. All subjects showed a shift in optimal angle to longer muscle lengths for MVCs (17+/-16 deg at 2 h, 14+/-7 deg at day 1, P < 0.05). This shift contributed minimally (approximately 3%) to the reduction in torque at 90 deg, as the torque-angle relation was relatively flat around the optimum. The twitch showed a smaller shift (approximately 4 deg) to longer lengths which was not statistically significant. Voluntary activation was significantly impaired in the early stages after exercise (2 h and day 1, P < 0.05), particularly at short muscle lengths. By 8 days after exercise, the optimal angle had returned to pre-exercise values, but MVC, twitch torque and voluntary activation had not fully recovered. Eccentric exercise causes a short-term shift in the optimal angle for MVCs and produces a length-dependent impairment in voluntary activation. Therefore, it appears that both central and peripheral factors limit muscle performance following eccentric damage, with limits to voluntary drive being especially important at short lengths.
为评估中枢和外周因素对离心性肌肉损伤后最大随意力量变化及其长度依赖性的影响,在较宽的角度范围内测量了随意扭矩和抽搐扭矩,并通过抽搐内插法测量了随意激活情况。在8名受试者中,以10°的增量测量了从60°至150°肘关节屈曲时最大随意收缩(MVC)的等长扭矩以及对运动神经刺激的成对抽搐扭矩。通过曲线拟合确定最佳角度。然后,每位受试者进行离心收缩,直至随意扭矩下降约40%。在运动后2小时、1天和8天重复测量,以跟踪急性和长期变化。运动前,MVC的最佳角度处于中间范围(93±10°;平均值±标准差),而抽搐的最佳角度在肘关节更伸展的角度(106±6°,P<0.05)。随意激活通常较高(>94%),但取决于肘关节角度,与最伸展角度相比,在最屈曲角度时激活约低4%。运动后2小时,MVC下降40%,而抽搐扭矩下降70%。所有受试者的MVC最佳角度均向更长肌肉长度方向偏移(2小时时为17±16°,第1天时为14±7°,P<0.05)。由于扭矩-角度关系在最佳值附近相对平坦,这种偏移对90°时扭矩降低的贡献最小(约3%)。抽搐向更长长度的偏移较小(约4°),无统计学意义。运动后早期(2小时和第1天,P<0.05)随意激活明显受损,尤其是在肌肉长度较短时。运动后8天,最佳角度已恢复到运动前值,但MVC、抽搐扭矩和随意激活尚未完全恢复。离心运动导致MVC的最佳角度发生短期偏移,并在随意激活中产生长度依赖性损伤。因此,似乎中枢和外周因素在离心性损伤后均限制肌肉性能,在短长度时对随意驱动的限制尤为重要。