Abstract
An unfused tetanus of a motor unit (MU) evoked by a train of pulses at variable interpulse intervals is the sum of non-equal twitch-like responses to these stimuli. A tool for a precise prediction of these successive contractions for MUs of different physiological types with different contractile properties is crucial for modeling the whole muscle behavior during various types of activity. The aim of this paper is to develop such a general mathematical algorithm for the MUs of the medial gastrocnemius muscle of rats. For this purpose, tetanic curves recorded for 30 MUs (10 slow, 10 fast fatigue-resistant and 10 fast fatigable) were mathematically decomposed into twitch-like contractions. Each contraction was modeled by the previously proposed 6-parameter analytical function, and the analysis of these six parameters allowed us to develop a prediction algorithm based on the following input data: parameters of the initial twitch, the maximum force of a MU and the series of pulses. Linear relationship was found between the normalized amplitudes of the successive contractions and the remainder between the actual force levels at which the contraction started and the maximum tetanic force. The normalization was made according to the amplitude of the first decomposed twitch. However, the respective approximation lines had different specific angles with respect to the ordinate. These angles had different and non-overlapping ranges for slow and fast MUs. A sensitivity analysis concerning this slope was performed and the dependence between the angles and the maximal fused tetanic force normalized to the amplitude of the first contraction was approximated by a power function. The normalized MU contraction and half-relaxation times were approximated by linear functions depending on the normalized actual force levels at which each contraction starts. The normalization was made according to the contraction time of the first contraction. The actual force levels were calculated initially from the recorded tetanic curves and subsequently from the modeled curves obtained from the summation of all models of the preceding contractions (the so called “full prediction”). The preciseness of the prediction was verified by two coefficients estimating the error between the modeled and the experimentally recorded curves. The proposed approach was tested for 30 MUs from the database and for three additional MUs, not included in the initial set. It was concluded that this general algorithm can be successfully used for modeling of a unfused tetanus course of a single MU of fast and slow type.
Highlights
The mechanical output of a skeletal muscle is the sum of forces generated by its active motor units (MUs), and the forces of the individual MUs depend on a firing pattern of the motoneurons
When MU tetanic contractions evoked by trains of stimuli at variable time intervals are decomposed into twitch-shape responses to successive stimuli, the amplitude and the time parameters of these responses appear to be highly variable, and considerable differences in the tetanic force development are observed between the three types of MUs [9, 10]
The proposed approach can be used to develop more realistic muscle models composed of a set of MUs, which may be used to study processes of control of the skeletal muscle force
Summary
The mechanical output of a skeletal muscle is the sum of forces generated by its active motor units (MUs), and the forces of the individual MUs depend on a firing pattern of the motoneurons. Motoneurons generate trains of action potentials at variable time intervals [1,2,3,4,5], and each of these action potentials evokes a twitch-like force response [6,7,8]. The parameters of the twitch-like responses to individual stimuli appear to depend mainly on the force level reached by a MU when the stimulus is delivered. This dependence is specific for different MU types [10]
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