4.4 Article

A nerve stimulation method to selectively recruit smaller motor-units in rat skeletal muscle

Journal

JOURNAL OF NEUROSCIENCE METHODS
Volume 107, Issue 1-2, Pages 87-92

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0165-0270(01)00355-7

Keywords

motor-unit recruitment; nerve stimulation; direct current blocking; muscle twitch; isometric muscle force; relaxation time

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Electrical stimulation of peripheral nerve results in a motor-unit recruitment order opposite to that attained by natural neural control, i.e. from large, fast-fatiguing to progressively smaller, fatigue-resistant motor-units. Yet animal studies involving physiological exercise protocols of low intensity and long duration require minimal fatigue. The present study sought to apply a nerve stimulation method to selectively recruit smaller motor-units in rat skeletal muscle. Two pulse generators were used, independently supplying short supramaximal cathodal stimulating pulses (0.5 ms) and long subthreshold cathodal inactivating pulses (1.5 s) to the sciatic nerve. Propagation of action potentials was selectively blocked in nerve fibres of different diameter by adjusting the strength of the inactivating current. A tensile-testing machine was used to gauge isometric muscle force of the plantaris and both heads of the gastrocnemius muscle. The order of motor-unit recruitment was estimated from twitch characteristics, i.e. peak force and relaxation time. The results showed prolonged relaxation at lower twitch peak forces as the intensity of the inactivating current increased, indicating a reduction of the number of large motor-units to force production. It is shown that the nerve stimulation method described is effective in mimicking physiological muscle control. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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