Amann Markus, Proctor Lester T, Sebranek Joshua J, Eldridge Marlowe W, Pegelow David F, Dempsey Jerome A
John Rankin Laboratory of Pulmonary Medicine, University of Wisconsin-Madison Medical School, Madison, Wisconsin, USA.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2008 Dec;105(6):1714-24. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.90456.2008. Epub 2008 Sep 11.
We investigated whether somatosensory feedback from contracting limb muscles exerts an inhibitory influence on the determination of central command during closed-loop cycling exercise in which the subject voluntarily determines his second-by-second central motor drive. Eight trained cyclists performed two 5-km time trials either without (5K(Ctrl)) or with lumbar epidural anesthesia (5K(Epi); 24 ml of 0.5% lidocaine, vertebral interspace L(3)-L(4)). Percent voluntary quadriceps muscle activation was determined at rest using a superimposed twitch technique. Epidural lidocaine reduced pretime trial maximal voluntary quadriceps strength (553 +/- 45 N) by 22 +/- 3%. Percent voluntary quadriceps activation was also reduced from 97 +/- 1% to 81 +/- 3% via epidural lidocaine, and this was unchanged following the 5K(Epi), indicating the presence of a sustained level of neural impairment throughout the trial. Power output was reduced by 9 +/- 2% throughout the race (P < 0.05). We found three types of significant effects of epidural lidocaine that supported a substantial role for somatosensory feedback from the exercising limbs as a determinant of central command throughout high-intensity closed-loop cycling exercise: 1) significantly increased relative integrated EMG of the vastus lateralis; 2) similar pedal forces despite the reduced number of fast-twitch muscle fibers available for activation; 3) and increased ventilation out of proportion to a reduced carbon dioxide production and heart rate and increased blood pressure out of proportion to power output and oxygen consumption. These findings demonstrate the inhibitory influence of somatosensory feedback from contracting locomotor muscles on the conscious and/or subconscious determination of the magnitude of central motor drive during high intensity closed-loop endurance exercise.
我们研究了在闭环骑行运动中,收缩肢体肌肉产生的体感反馈是否会对中枢指令的确定产生抑制作用。在该闭环骑行运动中,受试者可自主决定其每秒的中枢运动驱动。八名训练有素的自行车运动员进行了两次5公里计时赛,一次无腰段硬膜外麻醉(5K(Ctrl)),另一次有腰段硬膜外麻醉(5K(Epi);24毫升0.5%利多卡因,L(3)-L(4)椎间隙)。采用叠加抽搐技术在静息状态下测定股四头肌的自主激活百分比。硬膜外利多卡因使计时赛前最大自主股四头肌力量(553±45牛)降低了22±3%。硬膜外利多卡因还使股四头肌的自主激活百分比从97±1%降至81±3%,且在5K(Epi)试验后该数值未变,这表明在整个试验过程中存在持续的神经功能损害。整个比赛过程中功率输出降低了9±2%(P<0.05)。我们发现硬膜外利多卡因有三种显著效应,这支持了在高强度闭环骑行运动中,来自运动肢体的体感反馈作为中枢指令的一个决定因素发挥着重要作用:1)股外侧肌的相对积分肌电图显著增加;2)尽管可用于激活的快肌纤维数量减少,但踏板力相似;3)通气增加与二氧化碳产生减少不成比例,心率增加以及血压升高与功率输出和耗氧量不成比例。这些发现证明了在高强度闭环耐力运动中,收缩的运动肌肉产生的体感反馈对中枢运动驱动大小的有意识和/或潜意识确定具有抑制作用。