Abstract

A study was conducted with Suffolk ram lambs to determine whether chronic endurance exercise would affect post-mortem changes in muscle tissue. Muscle fibre diameters, sarcomere lengths, fibre types, and pH and temperature declines were measured in five skeletal muscles ( semimembranosus, SM: vastus lateralis, VL; semitendinosus, ST; psoas major, PM; gastrocnemius, G). The exercise had no significant effect on muscle size or muscle fibre diameter in any of the muscles studied. However, endurance-exercised sheep had significantly shorter sarcomeres in all five muscles than their non-exercised counterparts. The pH decline curves differed among muscles; those having the highest proportion of glycolytic fibres had the slowest rates of pH decline. The increased proportion of slow-twitch fibres in the SM, VL, ST and G associated with the exercise regime had little effect on the post-mortem pH decline. However, the ST also had a significant exercise-associated increase in the proportion of oxidative-glycolytic fibres (intermediate) and was the only muscle in which exercise influenced the rate of pH decline significantly.

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