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O2 max is unaffected by altering the temporal pattern of stimulation frequency in rat hindlimb in situ
1Faculty of Kinesiology and 2Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, Alberta, Canada T2N 1N4
Submitted 21 January 2003 ; accepted in final form 8 April 2003
It might be anticipated that fatiguing contractions would impair the
aerobic metabolic response in skeletal muscle if significant fatigue developed
before full activation of aerobic metabolism. On the basis of this premise, we
examined two groups of rats to test the hypothesis that a gradual increase in
stimulation frequency would yield a higher maximal O2 uptake
(
O2 max) than beginning
immediately with an intense stimulation frequency because of a slower
progression of fatigue under the former conditions. In one group of animals,
the distal hindlimb muscles were electrically stimulated at a frequency of 60
tetani/min for 4 min (F60; n = 6 rats); in the other
group, the muscles were incrementally stimulated for 1 min at each of 7.5, 15,
30, and 60 tetani/min and for 2 min at 90 tetani/min (FInc;
n = 5 rats). Despite large differences in rate of fatigue [time to
60% of initial force was 47 ± 3 (SE) vs. 188 ± 1 s in
F60 and FInc, respectively] and the time at which
O2 max occurred (120
± 15 vs. 264 ± 6 s),
O2 max was not different
(419 ± 24 vs. 381 ± 44 µmol · min-1
· 100 g-1). Furthermore, time x tension integral at
O2 max (3.82 ±
0.41 vs. 4.07 ± 0.31 N · s) and peak lactate efflux (910
± 45 vs. 800 ± 98 µmol · min-1 · 100
g-1) were not different between groups. Thus our results show that
the more rapid progression of fatigue in F60 did not compromise the
aerobic metabolic response in electrically stimulated rat hindlimb muscles.
However, in both groups, O2 uptake and lactate efflux declined
after
O2 max was attained
in similar proportion to a further fall in force, suggesting that ongoing
fatigue with intense contractions reduced ATP demand below that requiring
maximal aerobic and glycolytic metabolic responses once
O2 max was reached.
maximal O2 uptake; aerobic metabolism; anaerobic metabolism; lactate
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