Neural Control of Movement Laboratory, Menzies Health Institute Queensland, Griffith University, Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia.
Integrated Neuromuscular Physiology Laboratory, Centre for Heart, Lung, and Vascular Health, School of Health and Exercise Sciences, University of British Columbia, Kelowna, British Columbia, Canada.
J Physiol. 2021 Dec;599(24):5379-5395. doi: 10.1113/JP281897. Epub 2021 Dec 3.
The purpose of this study was to determine how severe acute hypoxia alters neural mechanisms during, and following, a sustained fatiguing contraction. Fifteen participants (25 ± 3.2 years, six female) were exposed to a sham condition and a hypoxia condition where they performed a 10 min elbow flexor contraction at 20% of maximal torque. For hypoxia, peripheral blood oxygen saturation ( ) was titrated to 80% over a 15 min period and maintained for 2 h. Maximal voluntary contraction torque, EMG root mean square, voluntary activation, rating of perceived muscle fatigue, and corticospinal excitability (motor-evoked potential) and inhibition (silent period duration) were then assessed before, during and for 6 min after the fatiguing contraction. No hypoxia-related effects were identified for neuromuscular variables during the fatigue task. However, for recovery, voluntary activation assessed by motor point stimulation of biceps brachii was lower for hypoxia than sham at 4 min (sham: 89% ± 7%; hypoxia: 80% ± 12%; P = 0.023) and 6 min (sham: 90% ± 7%; hypoxia: 78% ± 11%; P = 0.040). Similarly, voluntary activation (P = 0.01) and motor-evoked potential area (P = 0.002) in response to transcranial magnetic stimulation of the motor cortex were 10% and 11% lower during recovery for hypoxia compared to sham, respectively. Although an of 80% did not affect neural activity during the fatiguing task, motor cortical output and corticospinal excitability were reduced during recovery in the hypoxic environment. This was probably due to hypoxia-related mechanisms involving supraspinal motor circuits. KEY POINTS: Acute hypoxia has been shown to impair voluntary activation of muscle and alter the excitability of the corticospinal motor pathway during exercise. However, little is known about how hypoxia alters the recovery of the motor system after performing fatiguing exercise. Here we assessed hypoxia-related responses of motor pathways both during active contractions and during recovery from active contractions, with transcranial magnetic stimulation and motor point stimulation of the biceps brachii. Fatiguing exercise caused reductions in voluntary activation, which was exacerbated during recovery from a 10 min sustained elbow flexion in a hypoxic environment. These results suggest that reductions in blood oxygen concentration impair the ability of motor pathways in the CNS to recover from fatiguing exercise, which is probably due to hypoxia-induced mechanisms that reduce output from the motor cortex.
这项研究的目的是确定严重急性缺氧如何改变持续疲劳收缩过程中和之后的神经机制。15 名参与者(25±3.2 岁,6 名女性)分别暴露在假条件和缺氧条件下,在 20%最大扭矩下进行 10 分钟的肘部屈肌收缩。对于缺氧,外周血氧饱和度( )在 15 分钟内滴定至 80%,并维持 2 小时。然后在疲劳收缩之前、期间和之后 6 分钟评估最大自主收缩扭矩、肌电图均方根、自愿激活、肌肉疲劳感知评级以及皮质脊髓兴奋性(运动诱发电位)和抑制(静默期持续时间)。然而,在恢复期间,肱二头肌运动点刺激评估的缺氧比假条件下的自愿激活更低,在 4 分钟(假条件:89%±7%;缺氧:80%±12%;P=0.023)和 6 分钟(假条件:90%±7%;缺氧:78%±11%;P=0.040)。同样,对运动皮质的经颅磁刺激的自愿激活(P=0.01)和运动诱发电位面积(P=0.002)在缺氧时分别比假条件低 10%和 11%。尽管 80%的 不会影响疲劳任务期间的神经活动,但在缺氧环境中,恢复期间运动皮质输出和皮质脊髓兴奋性降低。这可能是由于涉及中枢运动回路的缺氧相关机制所致。关键要点:急性缺氧已被证明会在运动过程中损害肌肉的自愿激活,并改变皮质脊髓运动通路的兴奋性。然而,对于缺氧如何改变疲劳运动后运动系统的恢复,知之甚少。在这里,我们使用经颅磁刺激和肱二头肌运动点刺激评估了与缺氧相关的运动通路在主动收缩期间和主动收缩恢复期间的反应。疲劳运动导致自愿激活减少,在缺氧环境中进行 10 分钟持续肘部弯曲的恢复期间,这种减少更为严重。这些结果表明,血液氧浓度降低会损害中枢神经系统中运动通路从疲劳运动中恢复的能力,这可能是由于缺氧诱导的机制降低了运动皮质的输出。