Abstract

The rise time of an isometric twitch, the tetanic tension, the twitch tetanus ratio, the frequency-tension relationship, and the height of the MUAP (motor unit action potential) were measured in fast twitch (medial gastrocnemius) and slow twitch (soleus) muscles of the cat immediately before, in the middle, and immediately after fatiguing isometric contractions at tensions of 30, 50 and 80% of each muscle's initial strength (tetanic tension recorded from the unfatigued muscle). Although the twitch-tetanus ratio was always less for the soleus than for the medial gastrocnemius muscles, the twitch-tetanus ratio for any one muscle was constant throughout the duration of fatiguing isometric contractions at any of the tensions examined. In contrast, the twitch tension and tetanic tension of the muscles were both less after the contractions, the largest reduction occurring for both muscles during contractions sustained at the lowest isometric tensions. The time to peak tension of an isometric twitch was prolonged for both muscles following the contractions. This was associated with a corresponding shift in the frequency tension relationship such that at the point of muscular fatigue, the muscles tetanized at lower frequencies of stimulation than did the unfatigued muscle. In contrast, the amplitude of the MUAP showed only a modest reduction throughout the duration of the fatiguing contractions.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call