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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Experimental studies of spinal mechanisms associated with muscle fatigue

Kalezic, Ivana January 2004 (has links)
Muscle fatigue is ubiquitous in every day life.Muscle fatigue might be considered as an altered state of motor behaviour, which impairs motor performance. By contrast, muscle fatigue could also be considered a positive phenomenon, which protects muscle tissue from damage that might be incurred to it by overuse. The principal aim of the thesis was to explore some of the mechanisms of muscle fatigue at the spinal level in animal models.The activation of multiple motor units of a single calf muscle may influence contractile properties of its neighbouring, otherwise inactive units, providing evidence for spatial spreading of fatigue between different muscle parts. The release of metabolites, their action on inactive muscle units and the effects of local hypoxia are the most likely causes. Fatigue-induced metabolite shift in the interstitium provokes excitation and/or sensitisation of high-threshold afferent fibers, with complex effects on the spinal premotoneuronal network involved in the modulation of motoneuronal output. This was examined by studing the intrasegmental lamellar distribution of the lumbar spinal interneurons following fatiguing contractions of the triceps surae muscle. Furthermore, fatigue of calf muscles enhanced the activity of fusimotor neurons to these muscles irrespective of the regime of muscle activity (isometric vs. lengthening) in conditions that simulate locomotion. Altered fusimotor activity, through increased or maintained muscle spindle afferent responsiveness may be advantageous, providing support to the skeletomotor activity and enhanced information about muscle periphery to higher nervous centres. The particular effects of interneuronal network at motor input (presynaptic inhibition system) and output (recurrent inhibition system) stages were then addressed. Fatigue of triceps surae muscle induced a suppression of the monosynaptic reflex. The intensity of presynaptic inhibition increased, while the intensity of recurrent inhibition decreased. Post fatigue-evoked changes in monosynaptic reflexes and presynaptic inhibition indicate the possibility that high-threshold afferents inhibit group Ia terminals pre-synaptically, which would allow fatigue-induced signals from the muscle to reduce the relevance of proprioceptive feedback. Besides intrasegmental, intersegmental spreading of nociceptive signals was explored. Activation of sensory afferents from dorsal neck muscles by capsaicin induces powerful activation of interneurons located in the cervical spinal cord, as well as a widespread activation of cells in lumbar spinal cord segments. The results confirm the pivotal role of small diameter muscle afferents in the orchestration of segmental responses to fatigue and show complex interactions that may lead to limited accuracy of motor output. They also depict processes that may be related to, and even become precursors of chronic muscle pain.

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