Muscle sympathetic single-unit response patterns during progressive muscle metaboreflex activation in young healthy adults.

Autor: Incognito, Anthony V., Nardone, Massimo, Teixeira, André L., Lee, Jordan B., Kathia, Muhammad M., Millar, Philip J.
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Zdroj: Journal of Neurophysiology; Sep2020, Vol. 124 Issue 3, p682-690, 9p
Abstrakt: Muscle sympathetic single-unit response patterns during progressive muscle metaboreflex activation in young healthy adults. J Neurophysiol 124: 682-690, 2020. First published July 29, 2020; doi:10.1152/jn.00305.2020.--Muscle sympathetic single units can respond differentially to stress, but whether these responses are linked to the degree of sympathoexcitation is unclear. Fifty-three muscle sympathetic single units (microneurography) were recorded in 17 participants (8 women; 24 ± 3 yr). Five 40-s bouts of 10% static handgrip were performed during a 10-min forearm ischemia to progressively increase metabolite accumulation. Each static handgrip was separated by a 75-s ischemic rest [postexercise circulatory occlusion (PECO)] to assess the isolated action of the muscle metaboreflex. During each set of PECO, individual single units were classified as activated, nonresponsive, or inhibited if the spike frequency was above, within, or below the baseline variability, respectively. From sets 1-5 of PECO, the proportion of single units with activated (34, 45, 68, 87, and 89%), nonresponsive (43, 44, 23, 7, and 9%), or inhibited (23, 11, 9, 6, and 2%) responses changed (P < 0.001) as total muscle sympathoexcitation increased. A total of 51/53 (96%) single units were activated in at least one set of PECO, 16 (31%) initially inhibited before activation. This response pattern delayed the activation onset compared with noninhibited units (set 3 ± 1 vs. 2 ± 1, P < 0.001). Once activated, the spike-frequency rate of rise was similar (8.5 ± 6.5 vs. 7.1 ± 6.0 spikes/min per set, P = 0.48). Muscle sympathetic single-unit firing demonstrated differential control during muscle metaboreflex activation. Single units that were initially inhibited during progressive metaboreflex activation were capable of being activated in later sets. These findings reveal that single-unit activity is influenced by convergent neural inputs (i.e., both inhibitory and excitatory), which yield heterogenous single-unit activation thresholds. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index