Abstract

Previous studies have suggested that older adults may be more resistant to muscular fatigue than young adults. We sought to determine whether motor unit firing rate might be a factor that determines the response to fatiguing exercise in young and older subjects. Motor unit recordings and muscular forces were obtained from the tibialis anterior (TA) muscle of 11 young and 8 older individuals. Maximal voluntary force was first measured during maximal-effort dorsiflexion contractions. Each subject then performed a series of 15 maximal isometric contractions, with each contraction lasting 30 s. A 10-s rest period separated the fatiguing contractions. As a result of the fatiguing exercise, both subject groups demonstrated a significant loss in maximal force. The force decline was less in the older adults (20.4%) than in the young adults (33.8%). As expected, prior to muscle fatigue, maximal firing rates in the TA muscle were greater in the young (28.1 ± 5.8 imp/s) than in the older adults (22.3 ± 4.8 imp/s). The decrease in motor unit firing rate with fatigue was also greater in the young adults (34.9%), than in the older adults (22.0%). These results suggest that the greater fatigue-resistance exhibited by older individuals might be explained by the fact that the decline in motor unit firing rate during fatigue is greater in young persons than it is in older adults.

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