What is the central question of this study? Can we manipulate muscle recruitment to differentially enhance skeletal muscle fatigue resistance? What is the main finding and its importance? Through manipulation of muscle activation patterns, it is possible to promote distinct microvascular growth. Enhancement of fatigue resistance is closely associated with the distribution of the capillaries within the muscle, not necessarily with quantity. Additionally, at the acute stages of remodelling in response to indirect electrical stimulation, the improvement in fatigue resistance appears to be primarily driven by vascular remodelling, with metabolic adaptation of secondary importance. Exercise involves a complex interaction of factors influencing muscle performance, where variations in recruitment pattern (e.g., endurance vs. resistance training) may differentially modulate the local tissue environment (i.e., oxygenation, blood flow, fuel utilization). These exercise stimuli are potent drivers of vascular and metabolic change. However, their relative contribution to adaptive remodelling of skeletal muscle and subsequent performance is unclear. Using implantable devices, indirect electrical stimulation (ES) of locomotor muscles of rat at different pacing frequencies (4, 10 and 40Hz) was used to differentially recruit hindlimb blood flow and modulate fuel utilization. After 7days, ES promoted significant remodelling of microvascular composition, increasing capillary density in the cortex of the tibialis anterior by 73%, 110% and 55% for the 4Hz, 10 and 40Hz groups, respectively. Additionally, there was remodelling of the whole muscle metabolome, including significantly elevated amino acid turnover, with muscle kynurenic acid levels doubled by pacing at 10Hz (P<0.05). Interestingly, the fatigue index of skeletal muscle was only significantly elevated in 10Hz (58% increase) and 40Hz (73% increase) ES groups, apparently linked to improved capillary distribution. These data demonstrate that manipulation of muscle recruitment pattern may be used to differentially expand the capillary network prior to altering the metabolome, emphasising the importance of local capillary supply in promoting exercise tolerance.