Significance of Group III and IV muscle afferents for the endurance exercising human

被引:89
|
作者
Amann, Markus [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Utah, Dept Med, Salt Lake City, UT 84112 USA
关键词
central fatigue; exercise; exercise pressor reflex; human; CENTRAL MOTOR DRIVE; DYNAMIC EXERCISE; HEALTHY HUMANS; PRESSOR REFLEX; SKELETAL-MUSCLE; VOLUNTARY CONTRACTIONS; EPIDURAL-ANESTHESIA; SUPRASPINAL FACTORS; PERIPHERAL FATIGUE; RHYTHMIC EXERCISE;
D O I
10.1111/j.1440-1681.2012.05681.x
中图分类号
R9 [药学];
学科分类号
1007 ;
摘要
With the onset of dynamic whole-body exercise, contraction-induced mechanical and biochemical stimuli within locomotor muscle cause an increase in the discharge frequency of thinly myelinated (Group III) and unmyelinated (Group IV) nerve fibres located within the muscle. These thin fibre muscle afferents project to various sites within the central nervous system and thereby substantially influence the exercising human. First, Group III/IV muscle afferents are the afferent arm of cardiovascular and ventilatory reflex responses that are mediated in the nucleus tractus solitarius and the ventrolateral medulla. Therefore, neural feedback from working skeletal muscle is a vital component in providing a high capacity for endurance exercise because muscle perfusion and O2 delivery determine the fatigability of skeletal muscle. Second, Group III/IV muscle afferents facilitate central fatigue (failure, or unwillingness, of the central nervous system to drive motoneurons) by exerting inhibitory influences on central motor drive during exercise. Thus, Group III/IV muscle afferents play a substantial role in a human's susceptibility to fatigue and capacity for endurance exercise.
引用
收藏
页码:831 / 835
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Discharge properties of group III and IV muscle afferents
    Kaufman, MP
    Hayes, SG
    Adreani, CM
    Pickar, JG
    SENSORIMOTOR CONTROL OF MOVEMENT AND POSTURE, 2002, 508 : 25 - 32
  • [2] Implications of group III and IV muscle afferents for high-intensity endurance exercise performance in humans
    Amann, Markus
    Blain, Gregory M.
    Proctor, Lester T.
    Sebranek, Joshua J.
    Pegelow, David F.
    Dempsey, Jerome A.
    JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON, 2011, 589 (21): : 5299 - 5309
  • [3] Reactive oxygen species activate the group IV muscle afferents in resting and exercising muscle in rats
    Stephane Delliaux
    Christelle Brerro-Saby
    Jean Guillaume Steinberg
    Yves Jammes
    Pflügers Archiv - European Journal of Physiology, 2009, 459 : 143 - 150
  • [4] Reactive oxygen species activate the group IV muscle afferents in resting and exercising muscle in rats
    Delliaux, Stephane
    Brerro-Saby, Christelle
    Steinberg, Jean Guillaume
    Jammes, Yves
    PFLUGERS ARCHIV-EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY, 2009, 459 (01): : 143 - 150
  • [5] Responses of group III and IV muscle afferents to dynamic exercise
    Adreani, CM
    Hill, JM
    Kaufman, MP
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY, 1997, 82 (06) : 1811 - 1817
  • [6] Comprehensive phenotyping of group III and IV muscle afferents in mouse
    Jankowski, Michael P.
    Rau, Kristofer K.
    Ekmann, Katrina M.
    Anderson, Collene E.
    Koerber, H. Richard
    JOURNAL OF NEUROPHYSIOLOGY, 2013, 109 (09) : 2374 - 2381
  • [7] Group III/IV Muscle Afferents Role in Determining the Magnitude of W'
    Bouzid, Mohamed Amine
    Zarzissi, Slim
    Zghal, Firas
    Rebai, Haitham
    ACTA PHYSIOLOGICA, 2018, 224
  • [8] Dynamic exercise stimulates group III and IV muscle afferents.
    Adreani, CM
    Hill, JM
    Kaufman, MP
    FASEB JOURNAL, 1996, 10 (03): : 1956 - 1956
  • [9] Autonomic responses to exercise: Group III/IV muscle afferents and fatigue
    Amann, Markus
    Sidhu, Simranjit K.
    Weavil, Joshua C.
    Mangum, Tyler S.
    Venturelli, Massimo
    AUTONOMIC NEUROSCIENCE-BASIC & CLINICAL, 2015, 188 : 19 - 23
  • [10] Increased sensitivity of group III and group IV afferents from incised muscle in vitro
    Xu, Jun
    Gu, He
    Brennan, Timothy J.
    PAIN, 2010, 151 (03) : 744 - 755