Abstract

BackgroundThe physiological background of exercise-induced muscle fatigue(EIMUF) is only poorly understood. Thus, monitoring of EIMUF by a single or multiple biomarkers(BMs) is under debate.After a systematic literature review 91 papers were included.ResultsEIMUF is mainly due to depletion of substrates, increased oxidative stress, muscle membrane depolarisation following potassium depletion, muscle hyperthermia, muscle damage, impaired oxygen supply to the muscle, activation of an inflammatory response, or impaired calcium-handling. Dehydration, hyperammonemia, mitochondrial biogenesis, and genetic responses are also discussed. Since EIMUF is dependent on age, sex, degree of fatigue, type, intensity, and duration of exercise, energy supply during exercise, climate, training status (physical fitness), and health status, BMs currently available for monitoring EIMUF have limited reliability. Generally, wet, volatile, and dry BMs are differentiated. Among dry BMs of EIMUF the most promising include power output measures, electrophysiological measures, cardiologic measures, and questionnaires. Among wet BMs of EIMUF those most applicable include markers of ATP-metabolism, of oxidative stress, muscle damage, and inflammation. VO2-kinetics are used as a volatile BM.ConclusionsThough the physiology of EIMUF remains to be fully elucidated, some promising BMs have been recently introduced, which together with other BMs, could be useful in monitoring EIMUF. The combination of biomarkers seems to be more efficient than a single biomarker to monitor EIMUF. However, it is essential that efficacy, reliability, and applicability of each BM candidate is validated in appropriate studies.

Highlights

  • The physiological background of exercise-induced muscle fatigue(EIMUF) is only poorly understood

  • Requirements a BM must meet are that the correlation between the measurement and the represented process is linear, that it shows the continuous change of the process, and that it appropriately reflects the outcome of a condition in the sense of a linear outcome measure

  • BMs need to be collected, cheap, the test should be easy to perform with widely available equipment, should be reliable when tested by different examiners and repeatedly, and independent of age, sex, environmental and climate conditions, pre-existing training condition, food, hydration, daytime, and the exercise monitored

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Summary

Introduction

The physiological background of exercise-induced muscle fatigue(EIMUF) is only poorly understood. Monitoring of EIMUF by a single or multiple biomarkers(BMs) is under debate. A biomarker (BM) is a measurable molecule or test, to objectively monitor the change of a condition or process over time, after treatment, or after training [1]. BMs may be used for diagnostic purposes, for monitoring purposes, or for risk assessment [2]. BMs can be used as an indicator of a biological state, or to objectively assess a biological or pathological process. To assess the degree of muscle fatigue (continuous reduction of muscle force (maximal voluntary contraction (MVC)) during exercise (exercise-induced muscle fatigue (EIMUF), peripheral fatigue) and the impact of exercise on the skeletal muscle, Finsterer and Drory BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders (2016) 17:40

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