Power fatigue of the rat diaphragm muscle

Author:

Ameredes Bill T.1,Zhan Wen-Zhi2,Prakash Y. S.2,Vandenboom Rene2,Sieck Gary C.23

Affiliation:

1. Department of Cell Biology and Physiology, University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 15261; and Departments of

2. Anesthesiology and

3. Physiology and Biophysics, Mayo Clinic and Mayo Medical School, Rochester, Minnesota 55905

Abstract

We hypothesized that decrements in maximum power output (W˙max) of the rat diaphragm (Dia) muscle with repetitive activation are due to a disproportionate reduction in force (force fatigue) compared with a slowing of shortening velocity (velocity fatigue). Segments of midcostal Dia muscle were mounted in vitro (26°C) and stimulated directly at 75 Hz in 400-ms-duration trains repeated each second (duty cycle = 0.4) for 120 s. A novel technique was used to monitor instantaneous reductions in maximum specific force (Po) andW˙max during fatigue. During each stimulus train, activation was isometric for the initial 360 ms during which Po was measured; the muscle was then allowed to shorten at a constant velocity (30% V max) for the final 40 ms, and W˙max was determined. Compared with initial values, after 120 s of repetitive activation, Po andW˙max decreased by 75 and 73%, respectively. Maximum shortening velocity was measured in two ways: by extrapolation of the force-velocity relationship ( V max) and using the slack test [maximum unloaded shortening velocity ( V o)]. After 120 s of repetitive activation, V max slowed by 44%, whereas V o slowed by 22%. Thus the decrease inW˙max with repetitive activation was dominated by force fatigue, with velocity fatigue playing a secondary role. On the basis of a greater slowing of V max vs. V o, we also conclude that force and power fatigue cannot be attributed simply to the total inactivation of the most fatigable fiber types.

Publisher

American Physiological Society

Subject

Physiology (medical),Physiology

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