Abstract

Exercise-induced tissue swelling and its possible consequence for tissue pressure were studied in rat soleus muscle. Rats ran for 75 min on a belt with a 10 degree positive incline. Wet weights of cryofixed soleus muscles were increased at 3 (16%), 6 (28%), 9 (16%), and 24 (16%) h after running compared with those of nonexercised controls. The transient increase in muscle wet weight correlated in time with an increase in muscle volume. Muscle fiber swelling accounted for most of the muscle swelling in absolute terms because of the large proportion (approximately 90%) of the muscle volume composed of fibers, but swelling of the interstitium was about twofold larger than fiber swelling per unit area. Muscle fiber degeneration was most frequently found at the end of the observation period, i.e., 24 h after running. The muscle swelling was not associated with an increase in intramuscular pressure. During the postexercise measuring period (18 min to 24 h after exercise), intramuscular pressures of exercised rats (1.3 +/- 0.3 mm Hg) did not differ significantly from control values (1.0 +/- 0.2 mm Hg). These findings indicate that increased intramuscular pressure is not responsible for the muscle fiber degeneration found in rat soleus muscle 24 h after endurance running.

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