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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This report describes changes of the rate of ATP hydrolysis in single, intact muscle fibres during the development of
fatigue
induced by intermittent tetanic stimulation. High (type 3) and low (type 1) oxidative muscle fibres dissected from the iliofibularis muscle of Xenopus laevis were studied at 20 degrees C. The rate of ATP hydrolysis was calculated during different time intervals from changes in the content of nucleotides, creatine compounds and lactate, as well as lactate efflux and oxygen uptake. During the first phase of intermittent stimulation, phosphocreatine is fully reduced while the rate of oxygen consumption increases to its maximum, the lactate content increases to a maximum level, and a small amount of IMP is formed; the rate of ATP hydrolysis in type 3 fibres is constant while force decreases, whereas the rate decreases approximately in proportion to force in type 1 fibres. After the first phase, the rate of ATP hydrolysis in type 3 fibres decreases slightly and the fibres reach a steady metabolic state in which the rates of ATP formation and hydrolysis are equal; in type 1 fibres a drastic change of the rate of ATP hydrolysis occurs and a steady metabolic state is not reached. On the basis of the time courses of the metabolic changes, it is concluded that the rate of ATP hydrolysis in type 3 fibres is reduced by acidification and/or a reduced calcium efflux from the sarcoplasmic reticulum, whereas in type 1 fibres inorganic phosphate and/or acidification inhibit the rate initially and
ADP
is a likely candidate to explain the drastic fall of the rate of ATP hydrolysis during late phases of fatiguing stimulation.
...
PMID:ATP formation and ATP hydrolysis during fatiguing, intermittent stimulation of different types of single muscle fibres from Xenopus laevis. 812 21
Fatigue
and lethargy, common symptoms in uraemia, have been attributed to many factors. To assess possible bioenergetic contributions to this, we examined the forearm muscle of five patients in end-stage renal failure using 31P-magnetic resonance spectroscopy. There was a small increase in the ratio of intracellular inorganic phosphate to ATP in resting muscle, suggesting an increased cytosolic phosphate concentration. During exercise, increased phosphocreatine breakdown was accompanied by rapid intracellular acidification and an increase in calculated lactic acid accumulation in the muscle of the uraemic subjects, suggesting glycolysis dominating over oxidative phosphorylation as a source of ATP. After exercise, the half-time of phosphocreatine (PCr) recovery was longer in the uraemic subjects, suggesting diminished mitochondrial function. The initial rate of PCr resynthesis was not significantly decreased, but when account was taken of the high cytosolic
ADP
concentration (which drives mitochondrial oxidative ATP synthesis) the calculated maximum oxidative capacity was significantly reduced in the uraemic subjects. Thus there was evidence of mitochondrial dysfunction in uraemia due either to limitation of oxygen supply, reduced mitochondrial content, or an intrinsic mitochondrial defect. This resulted in increased phosphocreatine depletion and increased glycolytic ATP production during exercise and there was partial compensation of the mitochondrial abnormality by increased
ADP
concentration. In three of these patients studied after elevation of haemoglobin with erythropoeitin (from 8 to 12 g/dl), initial phosphocreatine breakdown and lactic acid accumulation during exercise were normalized, while exercise duration and calculated maximum oxidative capacity remained significantly abnormal. This suggests that anaemia contributes to these metabolic abnormalities but does not fully explain them.
...
PMID:Effect of chronic uraemia on skeletal muscle metabolism in man. 838 87
The role of prolonged electrical stimulation on sarcoplasmic reticulum (SR) Ca2+ sequestration measured in vitro and muscle energy status in fast white and red skeletal muscle was investigated.
Fatigue
was induced by 90 min intermittent 10-Hz stimulation of rat gastrocnemius muscle, which led to reductions (p < 0.05) in ATP, creatine phosphate, and glycogen of 16, 55, and 49%, respectively, compared with non-stimulated muscle. Stimulation also resulted in increases (p < 0.05) in muscle lactate, creatine, Pi, total
ADP
, total AMP, IMP, and inosine. Calculated free
ADP
(ADPf) and free AMP (AMPf) were elevated 3- and 15-fold, respectively. No differences were found in the metabolic response between tissues obtained from the white (WG) and red (RG) regions of the gastrocnemius. No significant reductions is SR Ca2+ ATPase activity were observed in homogenate (HOM) or a crude SR fraction (CM) from WG or RG muscle following exercise. Maximum Ca2+ uptake in HOM and CM preparations was similar in control (C) and stimulated (St) muscles. However, Ca2+ uptake at 400 nM free Ca2+ was significantly reduced in CM from RG (0.108 +/- 0.04 to 0.076 +/- 0.02 mumol.mg-1 protein.min-1 in RG - C and RG - St, respectively). Collectively, these data suggest that reductions in muscle energy status are dissociated from changes in SR Ca2+ ATPase activity in vitro but are related to Ca2+ uptake at physiological free [Ca2+ bd in fractionated SR from highly oxidative muscle. Dissociation of SR Ca2+ ATPase activity from Ca2+ uptake may reflect differences in the mechanisms evaluated by these techniques.
...
PMID:Effects of prolonged low frequency stimulation on skeletal muscle sarcoplasmic reticulum. 856 84
Mechanical properties and metabolic adaptation to exercise in skeletal muscle of dystrophic hamsters were studied with an in vivo 31P-NMR multistep
fatigue
test. Three successive 20-min steps with increasing rhythms of tetanic stimulation were followed by a 20-min recovery period.
Fatigue
in dystrophic hamsters (DH) developed more rapidly and was greater than in normal hamsters (NH); total mechanical performance per min increased step by step in NH while it decreased in DH, showing a progressive mechanical impairment of the dystrophic muscles.
ADP
and PCr recovery rates were significantly reduced in DH muscles. Acidosis appeared in both DH and NH and persisted in DH throughout the test, suggesting reduced mitochondrial oxidative capacity of the dystrophic muscle. The pH recovery rate was reduced in DH muscles suggesting a reduction in export protons capacity. These results provide evidence of impaired mitochondrial function and intracellular ionic regulation in the dystrophic muscle, associated with the lack of dystrophin and dystrophin-associated glycoproteins in the DH.
...
PMID:In vivo evidence of abnormal mechanical and oxidative functions in the exercised muscle of dystrophic hamsters by 31P-NMR. 858 20
Metabolic and mechanical properties of female rat skeletal muscles, submitted to endurance training on a treadmill, were studied by a 60-min in vivo multistep
fatigue
test. 31P-NMR was used to follow energy metabolism and pH. Mechanical performance was greatly improved in trained muscles. The oxidative capacity of the skeletal muscles was evaluated from the relationship between
ADP
calculated from the creatine kinase equilibrium and work and from the measure of the rate of phosphocreatine (PCr) resynthesis following exercise. In trained muscles,
ADP
production was lower per unit of mechanical performance, showing an improvement of oxidative metabolism. However, the PCr resynthesis rate was not modified. Slight acidosis and ATP depletion were observed from the beginning of the
fatigue
test. These modifications suggest changes of the creatine kinase equilibrium favoring mitochondrial ATP production. Our results indicate that muscle status improvement could be accompanied by ATP depletion and minimal acidosis during contraction; this would be of particular importance for objective evaluation of muscle regeneration processes and of gene therapy in muscle diseases.
...
PMID:Improvement of muscular oxidative capacity by training is associated with slight acidosis and ATP depletion in exercising muscles. 860 1
The effects of exercise (swimming),
fatigue
, and recovery on the intracellular pH (pHi), energy-rich phosphates, and related metabolites were studied in the gastrocnemius muscle of common frogs (Rana temporaria) at 20 degrees C. Exercise caused a rapid decrease in the content of phosphocreatine (PCr) and a corresponding increase in that of Pi. The ATP level remained virtually constant for 1 min; its precipitous decrease during the following minute was associated with a rise in the contents of inosine 5'-monophosphate (IMP) and NH4+, indicating a marked activation of AMP deaminase. Five minutes of swimming caused severe
fatigue
, which was correlated with decreases in muscle PCr (-85%), ATP (-42%), and pHi (-0.8 units). Recovery appeared almost complete within 2 h, and the frogs were then induced to swim again. During the initial 10 s of this second exercise, ATP synthesis was as high as in the first exercise, but the rate decreased more rapidly between 10 and 60 s, thus indicating that repeated exercise caused increased metabolic stress. IMP formation in working muscle was not strictly correlated with the pHi or the tissue contents of Pi, AMP and
ADP
, although from studies in vitro AMP deaminase is known to be modulated by these parameters.
...
PMID:Exercise and recovery in frog muscle: metabolism of PCr, adenine nucleotides, and related compounds. 896 11
During
fatigue
, muscles become weaker, slower, and more economical at producing tension. Studies of skinned muscle fibers can explain some but not all of these effects, and, in particular, they are less economical in conditions that simulate
fatigue
. We investigated three factors that may contribute to the different behavior of skinned fibers. 1) Skinned fibers have increased myofilament lattice spacing, which is reversible by osmotic compression. 2) A myosin subunit becomes phosphorylated during
fatigue
. 3) Inosine 5'-monophosphate (IMP) accumulates during
fatigue
. We tested the response of phosphorylated and unphosphorylated single skinned fibers (isometric tension, contraction velocity, and adenosinetriphosphatase activity) to changes in lattice spacing (0-5% dextran) and IMP (0-5 mM) in the presence of altered concentrations of P(i) (3-25 mM), H+ (pH 7-6.2), and
ADP
(0-5 mM). The response of maximally activated skinned fibers to the direct metabolites of ATP hydrolysis is not altered by osmotic compression, phosphorylating myosin subunits, or increasing IMP concentration. These factors, therefore, do not explain the discrepancy between intact and skinned fibers during
fatigue
.
...
PMID:Response of compressed skinned skeletal muscle fibers to conditions that simulate fatigue. 910 68
The effects of almitrine bimesylate and doxapram HCl on isometric force produced by in vitro rat diaphragm were studied during direct muscle activation at 37 degrees C. Doxapram and almitrine ameliorate respiratory failure clinically by indirectly increasing phrenic nerve activity. This study was carried out to investigate possible direct actions of these agents on the diaphragm before and after
fatigue
of the fibers. Two age groups of animals were chosen [6-14 wk (group 1) and 50-55 wk (group 2)] because it is known that increasing age decreases a muscle fiber's resistance to
fatigue
. Muscle strips were isolated from both group 1 and group 2 and directly stimulated (2-ms pulse duration, 5-15 V) to produce twitch tensions of 1.3 and 2.1 N/cm2, respectively. At low concentrations, doxapram (</=20 microg/ml) and almitrine (</=12 microg/ml) had no effect on twitch contraction or 100-Hz tetanic tension. However, 40 microg/ml doxapram and 30 microg/ml almitrine increased twitch tension by 9.0 +/- 1.4 and 11.6 +/- 1.9%, respectively, in animals of group 2 (n = 5). A
fatigue
protocol consisting of low-frequency stimulation (30-Hz trains, 250-ms duration every 2 s for 5 min) caused a reduction of twitch tension in animals of group 1 (48 +/- 4% of control) and group 2 (28 +/- 4% of control). At 90 min postfatigue, the twitch tension recovered to 72 +/- 3 and 42 +/- 2% of control values in group 1 and group 2, respectively. In the presence of doxapram (20 microg/ml), there was a significant increase in the recovery of twitch tension at 90 min in group 1 and group 2 (84.5 +/- 3.2 and 80.1 +/- 2.8%, respectively) compared with controls at 90 min postfatigue. In the presence of almitrine (12 microg/ml), there was a full recovery from
fatigue
in group 1 animals (100% of control) and a recovery to 95.6 +/- 2.1% of control in group 2 animals at 90 min. These results demonstrate a significant improvement in the rapidity and magnitude of recovery from
fatigue
in the rat diaphragm muscle in the presence of both doxapram and, especially, almitrine. These effects may be due to changes in intracellular calcium,
ADP
/ATP ratios, or oxygen free radical scavenging.
...
PMID:Almitrine and doxapram decrease fatigue and increase subsequent recovery in isolated rat diaphragm. 921 44
The manifestations of
fatigue
, as observed by reductions in the ability to produce a given force or power, are readily apparent soon after the initiation of intense activity. Moreover, following the activity, a sustained weakness may persist for days or even weeks. The mechanisms responsible for the impairment in performance are various, given the severe strain imposed on the multiple organ systems, tissues and cells by the activity. At the level of the muscle cell, ATP utilization is dramatically accelerated in an attempt to satisfy the energy requirements of the major processes involved in excitation and contraction namely sarcolemmal Na+/K+ exchange, sarcoplasmic reticulum Ca2+ sequestration and actomyosin cycling. In an attempt to maintain ATP levels, high-energy phosphate transfer, glycolysis and oxidative phosphorylation are recruited. With intense activity, ATP production rates are unable to match ATP utilization rates, and reductions in ATP occur accompanied by accumulation of a range of metabolic by-products such as hydrogen ions, inorganic phosphate, AMP,
ADP
and IMP. Selective by-products are believed to disturb Na+/K+ balance, Ca2+ cycling and actomyosin interaction, resulting in
fatigue
. Cessation of the activity and normalization of cellular energy potential results in a rapid recovery of force. This type of
fatigue
is often referred to as metabolic. Repeated bouts of high-intensity activity can also result in depletion of the intracellular substrate, glycogen. Since glycogen is the fundamental fuel used to sustain both glycolysis and oxidative phosphorylation,
fatigue
is readily apparent as cellular resources are exhausted. Intense activity can also result in non-metabolic
fatigue
and weakness as a consequence of disruption in internal structures, mediated by the high force levels. This type of impairment is most conspicuous following eccentric muscle activity; it is characterized by myofibrillar disorientation and damage to the cytoskeletal framework in the absence of any metabolic disturbance. The specific mechanisms by which the high force levels promote muscle damage and the degree to which the damage can be exacerbated by the metabolic effects of the exercise remain uncertain. Given the intense nature of the activity and the need for extensive, high-frequency recruitment of muscle fibres and motor units in a range of synergistic muscles, there is limited opportunity for compensatory strategies to enable performance to be sustained. Increased
fatigue
resistance would appear to depend on carefully planned programmes designed to adapt the excitation and contraction processes, the cytoskeleton and the metabolic systems, not only to tolerate but also to minimize the changes in the intracellular environment that are caused by the intense activity.
...
PMID:Mechanisms of muscle fatigue in intense exercise. 923 50
The effect of sustained submaximal exercise on muscle energetics has been studied on the single-fiber level in human skeletal muscle. Seven subjects cycled to
fatigue
(mean 77 min) at a work rate corresponding to approximately 75% of maximal O2 uptake. Biopsies were taken from the vastus lateralis muscle at rest, at
fatigue
, and after 5 min of recovery. Muscle glycogen decreased from 444 +/- 40 (SE) mmol glucosyl units/kg dry wt at rest to 94 +/- 16. Postexercise glycogen was inversely correlated (P < 0.01) to muscle content of inosine monophosphate, a catabolite of ATP. Phosphocreatine (PCr) in mixed-fiber muscle decreased at
fatigue
to 37% but was restored above the initial value (106.5%, P < 0.025) after 5 min of recovery. The overshoot was localized to type I fibers. The rapid reversal of PCr is in contrast to the slow recovery in contraction force. Pi increased at
fatigue
but less than that expected from the changes in PCr and other phosphate compounds. Mean PCr at rest was approximately 20% higher in type II than in type I fibers (86.4 +/- 3.6 and 71.6 +/- 1.8 mmol/kg dry wt, respectively, P < 0.05), but at
fatigue
similar PCr contents were observed in the two fiber types. Reduction in PCr in all fibers at
fatigue
suggests that all fibers were recruited at the end of exercise. PCr content in single fibers showed a great variability in samples at rest, exercise, and recovery. The variability was more pronounced than for ATP, and the data suggest that it is due to interfiber physiological-biochemical differences. At
fatigue
ATP was maintained relatively high in all single fibers, but a pronounced depletion of PCr was observed in a large number of fibers, and this may contribute to
fatigue
through the associated increases in Pi or/and free
ADP
. It is noteworthy that the increase in calculated free
ADP
at
fatigue
was similar to that after high-intensity exercise.
...
PMID:Phosphocreatine content in single fibers of human muscle after sustained submaximal exercise. 925 54
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