Post‐fatigue ability to activate muscle is compromised across a wide range of torques during acute hypoxic exposure

The purpose of this study was to assess how severe acute hypoxia alters the neural mechanisms of muscle activation across a wide range of torque output in a fatigued muscle. Torque and electromyography responses to transcranial and motor nerve stimulation were collected from 10 participants (27 year...

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Veröffentlicht in:The European journal of neuroscience 2022-09, Vol.56 (5), p.4653-4668
Hauptverfasser: McKeown, Daniel J., McNeil, Chris J., Simmonds, Michael J., Kavanagh, Justin J.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The purpose of this study was to assess how severe acute hypoxia alters the neural mechanisms of muscle activation across a wide range of torque output in a fatigued muscle. Torque and electromyography responses to transcranial and motor nerve stimulation were collected from 10 participants (27 years ± 5 years, 1 female) following repeated performance of a sustained maximal voluntary contraction that reduced torque to 60% of the pre‐fatigue peak torque. Contractions were performed after 2 h of hypoxic exposure and during a sham intervention. For hypoxia, peripheral blood oxygen saturation was titrated to 80% over a 15‐min period and remained at 80% for 2 h. Maximal voluntary torque, electromyography root mean square, voluntary activation and corticospinal excitability (motor evoked potential area) and inhibition (silent period duration) were then assessed at 100%, 90%, 80%, 70%, 50% and 25% of the target force corresponding to the fatigued maximal voluntary contraction. No hypoxia‐related effects were identified for voluntary activation elicited during motor nerve stimulation. However, during measurements elicited at the level of the motor cortex, voluntary activation was reduced at each torque output considered (P = .002, ηp2 = .829). Hypoxia did not impact the correlative linear relationship between cortical voluntary activation and contraction intensity or the correlative curvilinear relationship between motor nerve voluntary activation and contraction intensity. No other hypoxia‐related effects were identified for other neuromuscular variables. Acute severe hypoxia significantly impairs the ability of the motor cortex to voluntarily activate fatigued muscle across a wide range of torque output. Ten participants were exposed to a sham condition and a hypoxia condition (80% peripheral blood oxygen saturation) for 2 h. Transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS) and motor nerve stimulation (MNS) were employed following fatiguing maximal elbow flexion contractions. Voluntary activation (VA) assessed with TMS was significantly reduced in hypoxia, while VA assessed with MNS remained unaffected.
ISSN:0953-816X
1460-9568
DOI:10.1111/ejn.15773