Temperature sensitivity of tension development in a fast-twitch muscle of the rat
β Scribed by Murtada H. Elmubarak; Dr. K. W. Ranatunga
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1984
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 507 KB
- Volume
- 7
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0148-639X
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β¦ Synopsis
Abstract
Isometric contractions of the biceps brachii (short head) muscle in the rat were recorded in vitro with direct stimulation and at different temperatures (range, 35Β°Cβ10Β°C). In confirmation of our previous findings from fast extensor digitorum longus and slow soleus muscles, the time and rate parameters of the twitch and the tetanus showed an increased temperature sensitivity below 20Β°C. The dependence on the initial muscle length of the rate of rise of tetanic tension was examined at 27Β°C and at 15Β°C. When represented as a percentage of the tetanic tension at each length, the rate of rise was independent of muscle length at both temperatures. Our interpretation of this particular observation is that the increased cooling depression of the rate of tension rise below 20Β°C is not associated with a qualitative change in its underlying basis.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
BUF/Mna strain rats spontaneously develop slowly progressing mild-moderate muscle atrophy of extensor digitorum longus, tibialis, and extraocular muscles, which consist mainly of fast-twitch type fibers, at nearly 100% incidence. They have lighter extensor digitorum longus muscles than soleus muscle
Spike-triggered averaging (STA) has been used to extract twitch profiles of single motor units (SMU) within the human masseter muscle. However, the reported twitch tensions may have been biased by the voluntary firing frequency of the SMUs, the complex architecture of the muscle, and by the biomecha