## Abstract The effects of muscle creatine manipulation on contractile properties in oxidative and glycolytic muscles were evaluated. Whereas control mice (NMRi; __n__ = 12) received normal chow (5 g daily), three experimental groups were created by adding creatine monohydrate (CR group; 5%, 1 week
Effect of castration on muscle growth in the mouse
โ Scribed by Rowe, R. W. D.
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1968
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 292 KB
- Volume
- 169
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-104X
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Male 129/Re mice were castrated at 18-24 days of age. At 20 weeks of age they were sacrificed and the body weights and the weights of the anterior tibialis, biceps brachii, extensor digitorum longus, soleus and sternomastoideus were recorded. These muscles were also examined cytologically for total fiber number and fiber diameter distributions. The differences between the muscle weights of castrates and controls were correlated with different levels of fiber growth. The level of fiber growth in the phasic anterior tibialis, biceps brachii and extensor digitorum longus (i.e. muscles bringing about body movements) was concluded as being under the indirect control of the pituitary growth hormone, in that it acts on the body as a whole thereby increasing the work load of these muscles. Whereas for the sternomastoideus there appears to be a more direct effect of testosterone.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
The levator ani muscle (LA) of the rat is highly androgen-sensitive and, like all skeletal muscles, deteriorates structurally and functionally when denervated. In order to elucidate the interplay of neural and endocrine influences, the separate and combined effects of denervation and castration on m