Department of Medicine, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, Utah, USA.
J Appl Physiol (1985). 2013 Aug 1;115(3):355-64. doi: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00049.2013. Epub 2013 May 30.
This study sought to determine whether afferent feedback associated with peripheral muscle fatigue inhibits central motor drive (CMD) and thereby limits endurance exercise performance. On two separate days, eight men performed constant-load, single-leg knee extensor exercise to exhaustion (85% of peak power) with each leg (Leg1 and Leg2). On another day, the performance test was repeated with one leg (Leg1) and consecutively (within 10 s) with the other/contralateral leg (Leg2-post). Exercise-induced quadriceps fatigue was assessed by reductions in potentiated quadriceps twitch-force from pre- to postexercise (ΔQtw,pot) in response to supramaximal magnetic femoral nerve stimulation. The output from spinal motoneurons, estimated from quadriceps electromyography (iEMG), was used to reflect changes in CMD. Rating of perceived exertion (RPE) was recorded during exercise. Time to exhaustion (∼9.3 min) and exercise-induced ΔQtw,pot (∼51%) were similar in Leg1 and Leg2 (P > 0.5). In the consecutive leg trial, endurance performance of the first leg was similar to that observed during the initial trial (∼9.3 min; P = 0.8); however, time to exhaustion of the consecutively exercising contralateral leg (Leg2-post) was shorter than the initial Leg2 trial (4.7 ± 0.6 vs. 9.2 ± 0.4 min; P < 0.01). Additionally, ΔQtw,pot following Leg2-post was less than Leg2 (33 ± 3 vs 52 ± 3%; P < 0.01). Although the slope of iEMG was similar during Leg2 and Leg2-post, end-exercise iEMG following Leg2-post was 26% lower compared with Leg2 (P < 0.05). Despite a similar rate of rise, RPE was consistently ∼28% higher throughout Leg2-post vs. Leg2 (P < 0.05). In conclusion, this study provides evidence that peripheral fatigue and associated afferent feedback limits the development of peripheral fatigue and compromises endurance exercise performance by inhibiting CMD.
本研究旨在确定外周肌肉疲劳相关的传入反馈是否会抑制中枢运动驱动(CMD),从而限制耐力运动表现。在两天的不同时间,八名男性用每条腿(腿 1 和腿 2)进行了恒定负荷、单腿膝关节伸肌运动至力竭(85%的峰值功率)。在另一天,用一条腿(腿 1)重复进行了性能测试,并在 10 秒内连续(连续)用另一条/对侧腿(腿 2-后)进行了测试。通过在运动后(Post-exercise)响应超最大磁股神经刺激时,从预先到运动后的增强四头肌抽搐力(ΔQtw,pot)的减少来评估运动引起的股四头肌疲劳。从四头肌肌电图(iEMG)中估计的脊髓运动神经元的输出用于反映 CMD 的变化。在运动过程中记录了感觉用力评分(RPE)。在腿 1 和腿 2 中,疲劳时间(约 9.3 分钟)和运动引起的 ΔQtw,pot(约 51%)相似(P > 0.5)。在连续腿试验中,第一腿的耐力表现与初始试验相似(约 9.3 分钟;P = 0.8);然而,连续运动的对侧腿(腿 2-后)的疲劳时间比初始腿 2 试验短(4.7 ± 0.6 比 9.2 ± 0.4 分钟;P < 0.01)。此外,腿 2-后后的 ΔQtw,pot 小于腿 2(33 ± 3 比 52 ± 3%;P < 0.01)。尽管腿 2 和腿 2-后期间 iEMG 的斜率相似,但腿 2-后运动结束时的 iEMG 比腿 2 低 26%(P < 0.05)。尽管上升率相似,但整个腿 2-后期间的 RPE 始终比腿 2 高约 28%(P < 0.05)。总之,本研究提供了证据,表明外周疲劳和相关的传入反馈通过抑制 CMD 限制了外周疲劳的发展,并损害了耐力运动表现。