1Sensory Motor Performance Program, Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago; and 2Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, 3Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, 4Department of Biomedical Engineering, and 5Department of Physiology, Northwestern University, Chicago, Illinois 60611
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ABSTRACT |
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Zhang, Li-Qun and W. Zev Rymer. Reflex and Intrinsic Changes Induced by Fatigue of Human Elbow Extensor Muscles. J. Neurophysiol. 86: 1086-1094, 2001. Fatigue-induced changes in intrinsic and reflex properties of human elbow extensor muscles and the underlying mechanisms for fatigue compensation were investigated. The elbow joint was perturbed using small-amplitude and pseudorandom movement patterns while subjects maintained steady levels of mean joint extension torque. Intrinsic and reflex properties were identified simultaneously using a nonlinear delay differential equation model. Intrinsic joint properties were characterized by measures of joint stiffness, viscous damping, and limb inertia and reflex properties characterized by measures of dynamic and static reflex gains. Fatigue was induced using 15 min of intermittent voluntary isometric (submaximal) exercise, and a rest period of 10 min was taken to allow the fatigued muscles to recover from acute fatigue effects. Identical experimental and data analysis procedures were used before and after fatigue. Our findings were that after fatigue, joint stiffness was significantly reduced at higher torque levels, presumably reflecting the reduced force-generating capacity of fatigued muscles. Conversely, joint viscosity was increased after fatigue potentially because of the reduced crossbridge detachment rate and prolonged relaxation associated with intracellular acidosis accompanying fatigue. Static stretch reflex gain decreased significantly at higher torque levels after fatigue, indicating that the isometric fatiguing exercise might be associated with a preferential change in properties of spindle chain fibers and bag2 fibers. For matched pre- and postfatigue torque levels, dynamic reflexes contributed relatively more torque after fatigue, displaying higher dynamic reflex gains and larger dynamic electromyographic responses elicited by the controlled small-amplitude position perturbations. These changes appear to counteract the fatigue-induced reductions in joint stiffness and static reflex gain. The compensatory responses could be partly due to the effects of increasing the number of active motoneurons innervating the fatiguing muscles. This shift in operating point gave rise to significant compensation for the loss of contractile force. The compensation could also be due to fusimotor adjustment, which could make the dynamic reflex gain much less sensitive to fatigue than intrinsic stiffness. In short, the reduced contribution from intrinsic stiffness to joint torque was compensated by increased contribution from dynamic stretch reflexes after fatigue.
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INTRODUCTION |
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Neuromuscular fatigue impairs
the force-generating capacity of muscles. It is experienced both in
everyday physical exercise and in pathological states, such as
neurological and muscular disease. During fatigue induced by sustained
maximal voluntary contraction (MVC), there is known to be progressive
reduction in voluntary muscle force, a reduction in muscle fiber
conduction velocity, a prolongation in muscle twitch contraction, a
decline in electromyographic (EMG) amplitude, and a shift of EMG power spectra toward the lower frequencies (Bigland-Ritchie et al.
1983; De Luca 1984
; Enoka and Stuart
1992
). To reach the same submaximal level of force after
fatigue, muscle EMG amplitude increases, reflecting the increased
unitary recruitment and firing rates required to compensate for the
contractile failure (Kirsch and Rymer 1992
;
Merletti et al. 1990
). Despite significant progress in
research on muscle fatigue, it is not very clear what are the mechanisms underlying neuromuscular fatigue or at which of the possible
sites it occurs (Bigland-Ritchie and Woods 1984
).
Accordingly, our objective here was to assess the interactions between
fatigue-induced changes in intrinsic muscle mechanical and electrical
properties and the resulting neurological compensatory responses.
Several studies indicate that both the intrinsic and reflex actions may
be affected by muscle fatigue and that neural control mechanisms may be
adapted to compensate for the loss of contractile force
(Bigland-Ritchie and Woods 1984; Enoka and Stuart
1992
). For example, evidence has been provided that during
fatigue, motoneuron firing rates may be regulated by a peripheral
reflex originating in muscle afferent responses to fatigue-induced
changes within the muscle (Balestra et al. 1992
;
Bigland-Ritchie et al. 1986b
; Garland and
McComas 1990
; Garland et al. 1988
;
Windhorst and Boorman 1995
; Woods et al.
1987
). However, it is not very clear how different types of
afferents contribute to the reflex inhibition during fatigue
(Garland and Kaufman 1995
). Some considered that
intrinsic muscle and motoneuron properties are most important
(Enoka et al. 1992
; Kernell 1995
;
Kernell et al. 1987
). Others argued that force-feedback
mediated through Golgi tendon organs was significant and helped to
reduce the sensitivity of the overall neuromuscular system to fatigue
(Kirsch and Rymer 1987
, 1992
).
Accordingly, the objectives of the present study were to evaluate
intrinsic and reflex changes induced by muscle fatigue and the
associated neural compensatory mechanisms. Roles of dynamic and static
stretch reflexes during muscle fatigue were also investigated. Experiments were performed by applying controlled perturbations to
human elbow extensor muscles in which fatigue was induced using voluntary intermittent submaximal isometric contractions. Both reflex
and intrinsic properties were identified simultaneously using a novel
nonlinear delay differential equation (NDDE) model. This model provided
us with a useful tool to differentiate intrinsic and
reflexive components of neuromuscular action, to quantify the changes
induced by fatigue, and to gain insights into the mechanisms underlying
contractile failure. Preliminary results of the study have been
presented in conference proceedings (Zhang and Rymer
2000).
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METHODS |
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Five normal subjects (aged 25-40 yr) without prior history of
neurological disorders or musculoskeletal injuries participated in this
study. The study was approved by the Institutional Review Committee.
All subjects gave informed consent before participating in the
experiment. A standard perturbation sequence was applied to the elbow
joint to manifest intrinsic and reflex properties before and after
fatigue. Fatigue-induced intrinsic and reflex changes were quantified
using an NDDE model (Zhang and Rymer 1997).
Experimental setup
An elbow joint driving device was used to flex and extend the elbow joint in a closely controlled manner (Fig. 1). The device was driven by a brushed DC servomotor (Cleveland Machine Controls F563). A digital controller using a Texas Instruments TMS320 digital signal processor was developed to control the servomotor. The distal forearm, wrist, and proximal hand of the subject were encased in a polymer cast and secured to the motor shaft through an aluminum beam located beneath the forearm. The motor shaft was set perpendicular to the ground and was aligned with the elbow flexion/extension axis. The elbow was perturbed in the horizontal plane with the beam and forearm parallel to the ground, and thus the gravitational force was constant. During the random angular position perturbations, the subject either remained relaxed or voluntarily generated a designated level of background muscle torque. The difference between the target torque and the measured background muscle torque was displayed in real-time on a computer monitor, and the subject was asked to keep the mean of this matching error at zero throughout a trial.
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Perturbation sequences
To fully characterize intrinsic and reflex properties of the
elbow neuromuscular control system, the joint needs to be perturbed appropriately to manifest both types of properties simultaneously. On
the one hand, the bandwidth of the perturbation signal needs to be high
so that the joint neuromuscular system receives persistent excitation
(Söderström and Stoica 1989) and the
subjects can maintain a steady "background" or mean muscle torque
during the random perturbations. On the other hand, the bandwidth
should be low enough to avoid potential vibratory suppression of reflex muscle activation or impairing muscle contractility (Zhang and Rymer 1997
). In addition, the perturbation amplitude needed to be both small enough to avoid inducing severe system nonlinearities and
yet large enough to obtain high signal-to-noise ratio. Various perturbation sequences and signal processing procedures were tested. A
band-limited Gaussian white-noise sequence with a bandwidth of 6 Hz,
and an amplitude standard deviation
= 1.5° was chosen because it was appropriate to elicit both intrinsic and reflex actions.
The subjects were generally able to maintain steady background muscle
torques during a perturbation trial.
Joint perturbation protocol
The subject sat upright in a customized seat. Initial elbow flexion was held at 90°, and the forearm was in the neutral position (0° supination). Shoulder abduction and flexion angles were 90 and 15°, respectively. Elbow flexion angle, perturbing torque, and EMG signals from the lateral, medial, and long heads of the triceps, anconeus, and biceps muscles were recorded using a pair of silver and silver-chloride surface electrodes. The electrodes were cut down to smaller size to fit the anconeus muscle. All signals were low-pass filtered with eighth-order Butterworth filters (230-Hz cutoff frequency) and sampled at 500 Hz. The EMG signals were also high-pass filtered (at ~15-Hz cutoff frequency) using a second-order filter. About 12 s of data were recorded during each perturbation trial.
At the beginning of the experiment, EMG and torque signals were recorded with the elbow fully relaxed to establish appropriate quiescent values. The signals were then recorded with the subjects generating isometric maximum voluntary contractions (MVC) in both flexion and extension directions. Each MVC measurement was repeated twice, and the maximal values obtained across all the trials were used as the MVC values. In subsequent trials, the subject was asked to maintain a steady level of background muscle torque ranging from 0 to ±50% of the flexion MVC (at the increment of 10% of the magnitude of the flexion MVC). The subject was asked to avoid co-contraction of the flexor and extensor muscles during the target torque matching. Since only the elbow extensor muscles were fatigued, some subjects only did background elbow extension torque matching.
Before the start of the random perturbation, initial elbow angle was set at the 90° by the servomotor for ~1 s. Target background muscle torque was specified by the experimenter for each trial, and target torque matching error was calculated and displayed in real-time on the monitor by the computer. The subject was simply instructed to keep the mean value of the error at zero, regardless of the actual target torque level.
After the elbow joint was subjected to controlled perturbations at each of the designated levels of background torque, elbow extensor muscles were fatigued using voluntary contraction exercises (see next section). A rest period of 10 min was then permitted to allow the fatigued muscles to recover from the acute fatigue effects. After the rest, the torque and EMG signals were recorded again at both quiescent and MVC levels, as was done before fatigue, to evaluate changes induced by fatigue. Then the same perturbations were repeated using the same levels of muscle torque as were used in the prefatigue period. After perturbation trials, the cast and padding were put back on the elbow-driving device and the same perturbation sequence was repeated, to help determine the inertia of the attachments. Inertia was estimated from these trials, and the difference between the total inertia and attachment inertia was attributed to the limb inertia itself.
Induction of muscle fatigue
Muscle fatigue was induced through intermittent submaximal
voluntary contraction (Bigland-Ritchie et al. 1986c;
Dolmage and Cafarelli 1991
). A target torque was
displayed on a computer monitor, and the subject was asked to generate
a specified level of target torque isometrically during the
ON period. The total duty cycle was 10 s long, and the
ON and OFF portions lasted 6 and 4 s,
respectively. The initial target torque level was about 60% of the
elbow extension MVC. The recorded elbow extension torque was displayed
together with the target torque on the computer screen in real time,
and the computer beeped throughout the ON periods. Each
exercise session lasted 6 min. After a rest of 2 min, the next exercise
session started at a lower target torque level as the muscle got
fatigued. In total, two and one-half sessions or 15 min exhausting
elbow extension exercises were used to fatigue the elbow extensor
muscles severely.
To ensure that the muscle fatigue studied here was the long-lasting
contractile fatigue (rather than the acute ischemic phase), a rest
period of 10 min was used to let the effects of fatigue on
electrophysiological fiber properties diminish. These acute effects
included reduction of muscle fiber conduction velocity and the
associated shift of EMG power spectra toward lower frequencies (De Luca 1984; Lindstrom and Petersen
1983
; Mortimer et al. 1971
). It has
been shown that the acute effects on fiber conduction diminish in about
10 min after the completion of fatiguing contraction, while significant
contractile fatigue lasts for about an hour or more (Kirsch and
Rymer 1987
, 1992
; Mortimer et al. 1971
).
Simultaneous identification of intrinsic and reflex changes induced by muscle fatigue
A method was developed recently to help characterize the
naturally co-existing intrinsic and reflex actions of muscles and joint
in an integrated model (Zhang and Rymer 1997). The elbow joint torque recorded during the random perturbations was determined by
both the intrinsic and reflex actions of the elbow muscles and joint. A
major difference between the intrinsic and reflex contributions is that
the reflex responses are significantly delayed by the reflex loop. The
following NDDE model was used with the delayed and nondelayed terms
describing the joint reflex and intrinsic actions, respectively:
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(1) |
Stretch reflexes are modeled nonlinearly with both dynamic and static
reflex gains and with the inherent asymmetry for stretch and release
identified. rp(),
rn(
), and
Kd(
) describe the effects of past
positive angular velocity, past negative angular velocity, and past
position deviation on current torque, respectively.
td1 corresponds to the delay from
flexion angle change (mainly through the muscle spindles activation) to
the reflex contribution to the joint torque. Time delays on both the
afferent and efferent sides and the neuromechanical delay are merged
and represented by the single time delay
td1.
p and
n represent the angular velocity thresholds
under which the dynamic flexing and extending of the joint cause
virtually no reflexive joint torque (muscle force). The thresholds
p and
n in Eq. 1 were taken as zero in this study for simplicity.
For physiological interpretation of the mathematical model, the NDDE
model was represented by physical components (Fig.
2). The top part of Fig. 2
represents the intrinsic muscle (joint) properties, where
K() and B(
) are the joint elastic stiffness and viscosity, respectively. The bottom part represents the
reflex feedback properties of the muscles crossing the joint. In
addition to the intrinsic muscle and joint properties, the three
position reflex parameters,
rp(
,td1),
rn(
,td1),
and
Kd(
,td1),
characterize the stretch reflex actions that are caused by the angular
perturbation occurred td1 seconds ago.
Notice that
rp(
,td1)
and
rn(
,td1) correspond to unidirectional velocity of stretching and shortening, respectively.
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A continuous-time system identification method was developed
to help estimate parameters of the NDDE model directly from sampled data while retaining realistic physical or physiological
interpretations. Since the limb and attachment inertia was not affected
by fatigue and muscle contraction, the inertia was estimated separately
using trials during which the subject was relaxed without any voluntary contraction. The inertia component was dominant in such trials and thus
the inertia could be determined more accurately. The estimated inertia
was taken as a known constant in subsequent determination of other
parameters, which simplified the task and made estimation of other
parameters more reliable (Zhang and Rymer 1997). Reflex
loop delay td1 was also determined
separately by tapping the triceps tendon using an instrumented hammer
with tapping force recorded and measuring the reflex torque
response at the elbow (Zhang and Rymer 1997
;
Zhang et al. 1999
, 2000b
). The delay from the start of
the tapping force to the onset of reflex-mediated elbow extension
torque was taken as the reflex loop delay
td1.
The same NDDE model of Eq. 1 was used to characterize intrinsic and reflex properties under both pre- and postfatigue conditions. Comparison between the closely matched pre- and postfatigue states provided us with a quantitative tool to gain insights into muscle fatigue.
Fatigue-induced changes in muscle EMG signals
The sampled EMG signal was full-wave rectified and low-pass filtered to obtain the linear envelope (LE). The relationship between the mean EMG LE (representing the average muscle activation) and the mean joint background muscles torque across the different perturbation trials with different levels of background muscle torque was compared between the before and after fatigue conditions to evaluate fatigue-induced change in muscle activation. Furthermore, the computer-controlled small-amplitude position perturbation was a major factor contributing to the variation of the EMG LE during the small-amplitude perturbation. Under closely matched pre- and postfatigue condition with the identical small-amplitude perturbation (as the stimulation input of the system), change in the variation of the EMG LE (as the system output) reflected the change in the dynamic stretch reflex gain of the neuromuscular system involved. Therefore change in the variation of the EMG LE was compared before and after fatigue to evaluate the change in the dynamic stretch reflex gain.
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RESULTS |
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General features
Subjects maintained steady "background" or mean muscle torque
during the perturbations. For comparable levels of contraction pre- and
postfatigue, both the mean and variance of the extensor EMG activity
during the perturbation increased after fatigue (Fig. 3). The highest target torque in
extension (50% of the flexion MVC) corresponded to a maximal
extension target torque ranged from 56 to 74% of the corresponding
extension MVC for the subjects tested. After fatigue, the subjects
could no longer generate as much torque and the target torque matching
was performed within their torque-generating capacity. Fatigue-induced
changes in intrinsic and reflex properties were investigated in
comparable ranges of joint torque.
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Effects of fatigue on muscle strength
Muscle strength was recorded as maximum joint torque at the
beginning of the experiments. The second and third columns in Table
1 give the MVC torques in the flexion and
extension directions respectively. The flexion MVC was always higher
than the extension MVC, indicating the extensor muscles are routinely
weaker than the flexors (Kulig et al. 1984;
Singh and Karpovich 1968
).
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The intermittent isometric extension proved to be a rather effective exercise to fatigue the elbow extensor muscles. Figure 4 shows the elbow extension torque and EMG signals of multiple extensor and flexor muscles during the first 80 s of the exercise. The target torque was set at 60% of the extension MVC. When the subjects could no longer generate the desired level of elbow extension torque during the later portion of the exercise session, they were asked to produce their MVC torque at that time. The finding of increased amplitude of EMG signals near the end of the 80 s (as compared with the EMG signals at the beginning of the exercise) indicates that there was increased motor unit activation during fatiguing contraction (Fig. 4). After the intense fatiguing exercise of elbow extension, the MVC levels (listed in the 3rd-5th columns of Table 1) verify that the elbow extensor MVC decreased substantially with the reduction ranging from about 40-66%.
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Effects of fatigue on muscle EMG signal spectrum
As the fatigue exercise progresses, for a given torque level, the power spectrum of the EMG signals increased in amplitude and was shifted toward the lower frequency (Fig. 5). This short-term fatigue effect was modified by a rest period after the fatiguing exercise. For matched torque, the postfatigue EMG amplitudes were higher than their prefatigue counterparts due to the increased motor unit recruitment required to achieve the desired torque; however, the postfatigue EMG spectrum did not display the leftward frequency shift as compared with the prefatigue signal. This is presumably because the 10-min rest period after the fatiguing exercise allowed restitution of muscle fiber conduction velocity to normal levels without permitting significant recovery of contractile force.
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Effects of fatigue on joint stiffness and static stretch reflex gain
Figure 6A shows the variation in joint stiffness K and in static stretch reflex gain Kd as functions of the background joint torque. Both K and Kd reflect the torque responses caused by changes in elbow flexion angle, and they have the same unit. Their differences lie in that K describes the intrinsic mechanical properties of muscle and Kd the delayed reflex actions. As shown in Fig. 6A, both K and Kd were reduced after fatigue. However, because of severe muscle fatigue, the subject could no longer maintain elbow extension torques 25 N/m, and thus postfatigue K and Kd curves were estimated over a narrower range of background muscle torque. Nonetheless it is evident that the difference between the pre- and postfatigue stiffness in Fig. 6A increases gradually with the background muscle torque. In other words, the stiffness reduction became larger as the level of muscle contraction increased.
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Fatigue-induced reductions in joint stiffness were observed
consistently across all subjects. Figure
7A shows the change in joint
stiffness as a function of background muscle torque for five subjects.
Student's t-tests of paired difference were performed at
each specified level of background muscle torque to check whether joint
stiffness was reduced significantly after fatigue. Statistical analysis
shows that fatigue-induced stiffness reduction was significant for
background muscle torques 1 N/m at the significance level of = 0.05. The fatigue-induced reduction in static stretch reflex gain is
shown in Fig. 7E, which indicates that the gain reduction is
significant for background muscle torque 4 N/m (significance level
P < 0.05).
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Effects of fatigue on joint viscosity
The severe muscle fatigue induced in this experiment also caused changes in joint viscosity. As shown in Fig. 6B for one subject, joint viscosity increased measurably after fatigue. The difference between the pre- and postfatigue viscosity in Fig. 6B increased gradually with increasing background muscle torque. Figure 7B shows the fatigue-induced change in joint viscosity averaged over all subjects. Student's t-test with paired comparison indicates that postfatigue joint viscosity increases significantly for background muscle torques 12 N/m (P < 0.05).
Effects of fatigue on dynamic stretch reflex gain
The calculated dynamic stretch reflex gains for stretching (rp) and shortening (rn) the contracting elbow extensor muscles are shown in Fig. 6C. The rp and rn before and after fatigue are displayed as functions of the background elbow extensor contraction. Figure 7, C and D, gives the changes in rp and rn averaged for multiple subjects, respectively. Paired t-tests show that the dynamic reflex gain for stretching the contracting elbow extensor muscles is significantly higher than the dynamic reflex gain before fatigue for background muscle torque >10 N/m (P < 0.05). To reach the same mean level of background muscle torque after fatigue, the subject relied more on the dynamic stretch reflex and augmented the gain significantly. On the other hand, there is no significant fatigue-induced change in dynamic reflex gain for muscle shortening.
The increase in the dynamic reflex gain shown in the preceding text was
corroborated by an increase in the variance of the EMG LE elicited by
the small-amplitude perturbations. These perturbations were controlled
by the servomotor so as to impose identical movements before and after
fatigue (Fig. 8). Paired
t-tests showed that the standard deviation of the EMG LE was
significantly higher after fatigue than that before fatigue for
background torque >4 N/m. The postfatigue increase in the variation of
the EMG LE was associated with concurrent increase in the mean EMG
amplitude (Fig. 8), which was increased significantly for joint torque
>2 N/m, indicating stronger effort needed to reach the same level of
joint torque after fatigue (Kirsch and Rymer 1992;
Merletti et al. 1990
). Both the increased variance of
the EMG LE and the increased mean EMG LE could be observed over
comparable levels of pre- and postfatigue background muscle torque
(Fig. 3).
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DISCUSSION |
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The NDDE model provides us with a useful method to quantify reflex and intrinsic mechanical changes caused by muscle fatigue with the model parameters estimated through in vivo experiment on human subjects. The perturbation experiment and the fatigue exercise were done using the same device with the arm fixed to the device at the same posture throughout the whole experiment. The closely matched pre- and postfatigue experimental conditions and identical analysis procedure minimized potential errors and allowed us to estimate the model parameter and their pre- and postfatigue differences more reliably. The results showed that long-lasting contractile fatigue caused changes in both reflex and intrinsic properties of the neuromuscular system especially at higher levels of muscle contraction when compensation for fatigue was potentially more important. The compensatory mechanism was reflected in the fatigue-induced changes in the relative contributions of the different intrinsic and reflex components.
We found that the intrinsic stiffness (K) was reduced after
fatigue and that the stiffness reduction became more severe at the
higher background muscle torque. Such a reduction in intrinsic stiffness presumably reflected the reduction in stiffness of the contractile elements and indicates that after fatigue, sarcomere crossbridges could not produce as much net force as they did before fatigue for the same amount of external stretch of muscle fibers (Edman and Lou 1990, 1992
). It should be noted that the
pre- and postfatigue stiffness comparisons were done at matched mean
levels of joint torque. This indicates that even with stronger levels of activation (that are required to reach the same level of torque), the fatigued muscles produced lower stiffness than its prefatigue control.
It is conceivable that the increase in joint viscosity (B)
after fatigue may be related to the reduction in muscle fiber
relaxation rate associated with acidosis accompanying muscle fatigue
(Edman and Mattiazzi 1981; Westerblad and Allen
1993
; Westerblad et al. 1993
). It has been
reported that myofibrillar ATPase activity is reduced in acidosis,
which would likely reduce the detachment rate of crossbridges and thus
result in prolonged relaxation (Allen et al. 1995
;
Cooke et al. 1988
; Parkhouse 1992
). For
movements of matched speed, the fatigue-induced reduction in the
crossbridges detachment rate and muscle fiber relaxation rate could
result in higher resistance after fatigue. In other words, the
velocity-dependent viscous resistance force increased after fatigue
because of reduced detachment rate and thus increased viscosity.
It is also conceivable that the strenuous fatiguing exercise used in
this study could also have altered intrafusal properties. For example,
in a study on fatigue-induced neuromuscular changes, Bongiovanni and
Hagbarth showed a reduction in Ia afferent inflow from the spindles
that they attributed to intrafusal fiber fatigue (Bongiovanni
and Hagbarth 1990; Hagbarth and Macefield 1995
). It is known that different intrafusal fibers may have different degrees
of resistance to muscle fatigue. For example, in a study on glycogen
depletion in intrafusal muscle fibers and related responses at the
primary endings, Decorte et al. induced glycogen depletion by
long-period stimulation of static
axons in cat. In two experiments
with normal circulation, glycogen depletion was observed in a large
number of chain and bag2 (static bag) fibers but
only in 1 of 19 bag1 (dynamic bag) fibers
examined (Decorte et al. 1984
). Although it is not
certain that extrafusal fatigue is accompanied by intrafusal fatigue
(since the intrafusal fiber is not strictly load bearing), it does
appear that there may be a change in fiber transduction in fatigue,
potentially attributable to altered mechanical properties in the
transduction region or potentially because of thermal or metabolic
changes. Altered behavior of intrafusal chain and static bag fibers
would likely promote the postfatigue reduction in the static stretch reflex gain observed in this study.
When a high-level background muscle torque is to be generated, the dynamic reflex pathway potentially contributes relatively more to counteract fatigue-induced reductions in joint stiffness and static reflex gain. As reflected in the postfatigue experiments, the neuromuscular system increased dynamic stretch reflex gain at the same level of joint torque after fatigue. Since the pre- and postfatigue joint perturbations were identical, the increased postfatigue EMG LE variation elicited by the controlled small-amplitude perturbation provides evidence of increased dynamic reflex gain (Fig. 8).
The underlying mechanisms for the increased dynamic stretch reflex gain
could be due to fusimotor adjustment and/or to the recruitment of new
motor units required to reach the higher levels of joint torque
(Hagbarth and Macefield 1995; Ljubisavljevic et al. 1992a
,b
). A representative relationship between the
variance of the EMG LE and the mean EMG LE is shown in Fig.
9. Paired t-test showed that
there was small but significant reduction in the slope of the
relationship between the variance of the EMG LE and the mean EMG LE
after fatigue with P = 0.024 (there was no significant difference in the corresponding intercept). This indicates that at matched levels of activation (assuming that such matches
could be represented by matched mean EMG LE), the dynamic reflex gain was modestly reduced after fatigue at the higher activation levels. More importantly, at matched background muscle torques, the
variation of the EMG LE and the dynamic reflex gain was significantly
higher (Fig. 8). This indicates the dynamic reflex gain was enhanced after fatigue through the recruitment of new motor units (to reach higher levels of torque).
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Fusimotor adjustment could also play a role and help compensate for
fatigue-induced reduction in dynamic reflex gain at matched levels of activation, which could make the dynamic reflex gain much less sensitive to fatigue than intrinsic stiffness. In a related
study, the sites of failure during fatigue was investigated by applying
controlled stimuli to the neuromuscular system (by tapping the triceps
tendon using an instrumented reflex hammer) and evaluating
reflex-mediated responses at the levels of muscle activation (for
activation failure) and joint torque (for contractile failure)
(Zhang and Rymer 2001; Zhang et al.
2000b
). Identical tests were done before fatigue, after
moderate fatigue, and after severe fatigue. It was found that moderate
fatigue caused only contractile failure as indicated by reduction in
elbow extension torque but not in EMG response to the controlled
stimuli, while severe fatigue was associated with activation as well as
contractile failures as indicated by reductions in both EMG and joint
torque responses to the controlled tendon tapping (Zhang and
Rymer 2001
). The severe fatigue induced in the present study
was potentially associated with considerable reduction in EMG responses
to a controlled small-amplitude perturbation. The finding that only
small reduction in EMG response (and in dynamic reflex gain) was
observed in severe fatigue indicated that fusimotor adjustment could
compensate for fatigue and make reductions in EMG response and in
dynamic reflex gain much less sensitive to fatigue than the
corresponding reduction in intrinsic stiffness. In short, to reach the
same levels of torque, dynamic reflexes contributed relatively more and
intrinsic stiffness contributed relatively less after fatigue.
It is worth noting that the intrinsic and reflex changes associated
with muscle fatigue were assessed at comparable levels of submaximal
muscle torque before and after fatigue. This experimental protocol is
different from that used in some other fatigue studies in which
fatigue-induced changes were investigated under sustained MVCs before
and after fatigue (Bongiovanni and Hagbarth 1990; Garland and McComas 1990
; Woods et al.
1987
). Despite the difference in protocols, similar segmental
motor regulatory mechanisms may be involved in both sustained MVCs and
submaximal contraction (Bigland-Ritchie et al. 1986a
-c
;
Garland and Kaufman 1995
). The inhibitory reflex in
response to fatigue-induced muscle changes reported in previous studies
appears consistent with the reduction in static reflex gain observed in
the present study. The maximal effort used in previous studies left
little room for compensation by recruiting new motor units and
increasing dynamic reflex activity (Garland and McComas
1990
; Woods et al. 1987
). In contrast, the submaximal contraction used in the present study provides us
with a tool to evaluate the compensatory roles of intrinsic
and reflex components for muscle fatigue in tasks involved frequently
in daily activities.
For submaximal contractions, the observed intrinsic and reflex changes
associated with muscle fatigue were consistent with the findings of a
recent study on fatigue-induced changes for submaximal contractions in
which the authors reported that triceps surae muscle fatigue was
associated with a decrease in ankle joint stiffness and increases in
joint viscosity and dynamic reflex gain for comparable levels of muscle
torque (Qita and Kearney 2000). Static reflex gain was
not assessed in the preceding study.
It is also worth noting that both the intrinsic and reflex parameters
estimated might depend on the perturbation used because different
perturbations may cause the neuromuscular system to assume different
states. The band-limited "white-noise" perturbation used in this
study was designed to elicit both reflex and intrinsic components of
the system. Unlike a "step" perturbation that invokes a dynamic
stretch reflex response, the white noise perturbation invoked
continuous reflex and intrinsic contributions to joint torque. The
identification procedures gave a simultaneous estimation of the
intrinsic and reflex parameters averaged over a trial. The reflex
activities could be affected by the perturbation signals (bandwidth,
amplitude, etc.) considerably (Zhang and Rymer 1997).
Generally, very wide bandwidth perturbations tend to suppress reflex
contributions, while low bandwidth perturbations tend to promote them.
The perturbations used in this study were not necessarily optimal to
address all relevant hypotheses. Ideally, different perturbation
protocols are needed to manifest or suppress certain reflex or
intrinsic actions of neuromuscular systems affected by muscle fatigue
and evaluate them appropriately. In addition, further work can be done
to modify the NDDE model used in this study to include force feedback
as well as spindle-mediated position and velocity feedback
(Zhang and Rymer 1997).
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ACKNOWLEDGMENTS |
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The authors thank P.B.C. Matthews for helpful comments.
The authors gratefully acknowledge the support of the National Institutes of Health, the Whitaker Foundation, and the Falk Medical Research Trust.
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FOOTNOTES |
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Address for reprint requests: L.-Q. Zhang, Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, Suite 1406, 345 E. Superior St., Chicago, IL 60611 (E-mail: l-zhang{at}northwestern.edu).
Received 16 February 2001; accepted in final form 9 May 2001.
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