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Electrically induced quadriceps fatigue in the contralateral leg impairs ipsilateral knee extensors performance.

Authors :
Laginestra, Fabio Giuseppe
Amann, Markus
Kirmizi, Emine
Giuriato, Gaia
Barbi, Chiara
Ruzzante, Federico
Pedrinolla, Anna
Martignon, Camilla
Tarperi, Cantor
Schena, Federico
Venturelli, Massimo
Source :
American Journal of Physiology: Regulatory, Integrative & Comparative Physiology. May2021, Vol. 320 Issue 5, pR747-R756. 10p. 4 Graphs.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Muscle fatigue induced by voluntary exercise, which requires central motor drive, causes central fatigue that impairs endurance performance of a different, nonfatigued muscle. This study investigated the impact of quadriceps fatigue induced by electrically induced (no central motor drive) contractions on single-leg knee-extension (KE) performance of the subsequently exercising ipsilateral quadriceps. On two separate occasions, eight males completed constant-load (85% of maximal power-output) KE exercise to exhaustion. In a counterbalanced manner, subjects performed the KE exercise with no pre-existing quadriceps fatigue in the contralateral leg on one day (No-PreF), whereas on the other day, the same KE exercise was repeated following electrically induced quadriceps fatigue in the contralateral leg (PreF). Quadriceps fatigue was assessed by evaluating pre- to postexercise changes in potentiated twitch force (ΔQtw,pot; peripheral fatigue), and voluntary muscle activation (ΔVA; central fatigue). As reflected by the 57 ± 11% reduction in electrically evoked pulse force, the electrically induced fatigue protocol caused significant knee-extensors fatigue. KE endurance time to exhaustion was shorter during PreF compared with No-PreF (4.6 ± 1.2 vs 7.7 ± 2.4 min; P < 0.01). Although ΔQtw,pot was significantly larger in No-PreF compared with PreF (−60% vs −52%, P < 0.05), ΔVA was greater in PreF (−14% vs −10%, P < 0.05). Taken together, electrically induced quadriceps fatigue in the contralateral leg limits KE endurance performance and the development of peripheral fatigue in the ipsilateral leg. These findings support the hypothesis that the crossover effect of central fatigue is mainly mediated by group III/IV muscle afferent feedback and suggest that impairments associated with central motor drive may only play a minor role in this phenomenon. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03636119
Volume :
320
Issue :
5
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
American Journal of Physiology: Regulatory, Integrative & Comparative Physiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
170014943
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.00363.2020