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Published in: European Journal of Applied Physiology 3/2006

01-06-2006 | Original Article

Human skeletal muscle structure and function preserved by vibration muscle exercise following 55 days of bed rest

Authors: Dieter Blottner, Michele Salanova, Britta Püttmann, Gudrun Schiffl, Dieter Felsenberg, Björn Buehring, Jörn Rittweger

Published in: European Journal of Applied Physiology | Issue 3/2006

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Abstract

Prolonged immobilization of the human body results in functional impairments and musculoskeletal system deconditioning that may be attenuated by adequate muscle exercise. In a 56-day horizontal bed rest campaign involving voluntary males we investigated the effects of vibration muscle exercise (RVE, 2×6 min daily) on the lower limb skeletal muscles using a newly designed foot plantar trainer (Galileo Space) for use at supine position during bed rest. The maximally voluntary isometric plantar flexion force was maintained following regular RVE bouts during bed rest (controls −18.6 %, P<0.05). At the start (BR2) and end of bed rest (BR55) muscle biopsies were taken from both mixed fast/slow-type vastus lateralis (VL) and mainly slow-type soleus muscle (SOL), each having n=10. RVE group: the size of myofiber types I and II was largely unchanged in VL, and increased in SOL. Ctrl group: the SOL depicted a disrupted pattern of myofibers I/II profiles (i.e., type II>140 % vs. preBR) suggesting a slow-to-fast muscle phenotype shift. In RVE-trained SOL, however, an overall conserved myofiber I/II pattern was documented. RVE training increased the activity-dependent expression of nitric oxide synthase type 1 immunofluorescence at SOL and VL myofiber membranes. These data provide evidence for the beneficial effects of RVE training on the deconditioned structure and function of the lower limb skeletal muscle. Daily short RVE should be employed as an effective atrophy countermeasure co-protocol preferentially addressing postural calf muscles during prolonged clinical immobilization or long-term human space missions.
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Metadata
Title
Human skeletal muscle structure and function preserved by vibration muscle exercise following 55 days of bed rest
Authors
Dieter Blottner
Michele Salanova
Britta Püttmann
Gudrun Schiffl
Dieter Felsenberg
Björn Buehring
Jörn Rittweger
Publication date
01-06-2006
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
European Journal of Applied Physiology / Issue 3/2006
Print ISSN: 1439-6319
Electronic ISSN: 1439-6327
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00421-006-0160-6

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