Peripheral Fatigue - Max Exercise Flashcards
1
Q
What is fatigue at maximal exercise?
A
- Inability to maintain a given power/work output
2
Q
Soderland et al (1993)
A
- Maximal electrically evoked isometric quadricep contractions
- 20 contractions
- 60% reduction in force production from 1-20 contractions
3
Q
Phosphocreatine hydrolysis
A
- Rapid reaction and resynthesis of ATP
- Maintain high rate of ATP turnover
4
Q
Glycolysis
A
- Breakdown of muscle glycogen
- Several more reactions (9) - 2 reactions produce ATP
- Produces lactate
- Ability to resynthesise ATP is lower due to more reactions
5
Q
What is the PCr reaction:
A
PCr + ADP + H+ (CK)= Cr + ATP
6
Q
PCr for subsequent bout of exercise - Trump et al (1996)
A
- Max intensity exercise to deplete PCr
- One group had a cuff on the leg to keep away re-synthesised PCr
- Following another max intensity sprint, cuff group produced significantly less work than control
- PCr plays a significant role in the subsequent bout of ATP
7
Q
How long before glycogen becomes depleted?
A
35-40 minutes
8
Q
Name the 2 ways that hydrogen ion accumulation happens:
A
- Hydrogen ion accumulation partly comes from glycolysis to convert lactate into pyruvate
- ATPase breaks down ATP to produce a hydrogen ion
9
Q
Spriet et al (1987)
A
- Strong correlation between increased lactate production and muscle acidosis
- However, the lactate accumulation doesn’t directly cause muscle acidosis, conversion of lactate to pyruvate causes the increased H+ which increases muscle acidosis
10
Q
Is muscle acidosis a limiting to max exercise performance?
A
- Normal muscle pH = 7.1 but reduced to around 6.4 during max intensity exercise
- In vitro -low pH limits phosphofructokinase (PFK) but not in Vivo unless <6.4
- PFK is a rate limiting step of glycolysis - therefore impair glycolysis can be impaired with increase muscle acidosis
11
Q
Hill et al (2007)
A
- Beta alanine increases carnosine (which buffers H+)
- 3.2-6.4g/day of BA increase carnosine by 40-60%
- 10% increase in muscle buffering capacity
- 20% increased force production during isometric contraction
12
Q
Cooke et al (1988)
A
- Increased Pi impairs velocity of muscle contraction in Vivo (impairs calcium handling)
- Hard to measure Vitro studies but we known that PCr rapidly depletes with exercise and coincides with fatigue, suggests Pi must accumulated and be associated with fatigue
13
Q
Calcium handling (Duke and Steele, 2001)
A
- Calcium release and reuptake by SR is essential of activation of muscle excitation-contraction coupling
- Stimulation of SR calcium release by caffeine can improve muscle force production, even with low pH
- Calcium uptake is an ATP dependant process, and PCr depletion can reduce SR uptake
14
Q
Extracellular potassium accumulation to cause fatigue
A
- Sodium-potassium pump is ATP dependant - when ATP is depleted we can’t pump K+ back into the cell
- Therefore, we get an extracellular potassium accumulation
- Force production is impaired due to reduced action potential
15
Q
Nielson et al (2003)
A
- Reduced extracellular K+ in trained vs untrained leg