Abstract

The majority of motor unit studies were performed predominantly on calf muscles, where three types of units: S, FR and FF were found. These muscles are involved in postural activity, walking, running and jumping. The properties of foot muscles that perform other functions, e.g. scratching (in animals), and are purely co-active with calf muscles, are poorly known. The aim of the present study was to investigate the contractile properties of motor units in the flexor digitorum brevis. Fifty-six motor units were studied in male Wistar rats. Several methods of fast/slow motor unit categorization, presence of sag, contraction time values, and 20 Hz index, did not allow the separation of the studied motor units into discrete clusters. Therefore, motor units were divided into two groups: fatigable and resistant to fatigue, based on the fatigue index with the border value of 0.5 (although the distribution of the index was not bimodal). The fatigable motor units were stronger and faster compared to the resistant ones. In conclusion, the distribution of motor unit contractile properties in the studied foot muscle was continuous and indicated a lack of three separate physiological types of motor units that usually occurs for the majority of hindlimb muscles. This discrepancy appears to be associated with differences in the typical forms of motor unit activity in distinct muscles.

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