Abstract

[Purpose] The purpose of our study was to verify the inhibitory effects of static intervention (heat load and muscle stretching) on disuse-related adaptation changes in the soleus muscle and to compare these effects across different sites along its longitudinal axis. [Subjects] Forty 8-week-old male Wistar rats. [Methods] The effects of heat load and/or muscle stretching in the rat soleus during hindlimb suspension were evaluated by measuring the cross-sectional area of the muscle fibers, succinate dehydrogenase activity, and number of capillaries in the proximal, middle, and distal regions. [Results] With no intervention the proximal region showed the highest reduction in the cross-sectional area, whereas the distal region showed the highest reduction in succinate dehydrogenase activity and the number of capillaries due to hindlimb suspension. These differences between the proximal and distal regions decreased with both interventions, and the effects were most pronounced with a combination of heat load and muscle stretching. [Conclusion] Differences in the muscle structure between the proximal and distal regions increased due to hindlimb suspension, and this heterogeneity associated with muscle disuse was inhibited by static intervention including heat load and muscle stretching. Furthermore, the combination of heat load and muscle stretching most reduced the heterogeneity.

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