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Neuromuscular Consequences of an Extreme Mountain Ultra-Marathon

We investigated the physiological consequences of one of the most extreme exercises realized by humans in race conditions: a 166-km mountain ultra-marathon (MUM) with 9500 m of positive and negative elevation change. For this purpose, (i) the fatigue induced by the MUM and (ii) the recovery processe...

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Autores principales: Millet, Guillaume Y., Tomazin, Katja, Verges, Samuel, Vincent, Christopher, Bonnefoy, Régis, Boisson, Renée-Claude, Gergelé, Laurent, Féasson, Léonard, Martin, Vincent
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3043077/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21364944
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0017059
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author Millet, Guillaume Y.
Tomazin, Katja
Verges, Samuel
Vincent, Christopher
Bonnefoy, Régis
Boisson, Renée-Claude
Gergelé, Laurent
Féasson, Léonard
Martin, Vincent
author_facet Millet, Guillaume Y.
Tomazin, Katja
Verges, Samuel
Vincent, Christopher
Bonnefoy, Régis
Boisson, Renée-Claude
Gergelé, Laurent
Féasson, Léonard
Martin, Vincent
author_sort Millet, Guillaume Y.
collection PubMed
description We investigated the physiological consequences of one of the most extreme exercises realized by humans in race conditions: a 166-km mountain ultra-marathon (MUM) with 9500 m of positive and negative elevation change. For this purpose, (i) the fatigue induced by the MUM and (ii) the recovery processes over two weeks were assessed. Evaluation of neuromuscular function (NMF) and blood markers of muscle damage and inflammation were performed before and immediately following (n = 22), and 2, 5, 9 and 16 days after the MUM (n = 11) in experienced ultra-marathon runners. Large maximal voluntary contraction decreases occurred after MUM (−35% [95% CI: −28 to −42%] and −39% [95% CI: −32 to −46%] for KE and PF, respectively), with alteration of maximal voluntary activation, mainly for KE (−19% [95% CI: −7 to −32%]). Significant modifications in markers of muscle damage and inflammation were observed after the MUM as suggested by the large changes in creatine kinase (from 144±94 to 13,633±12,626 UI L(−1)), myoglobin (from 32±22 to 1,432±1,209 µg L(−1)), and C-Reactive Protein (from <2.0 to 37.7±26.5 mg L(−1)). Moderate to large reductions in maximal compound muscle action potential amplitude, high-frequency doublet force, and low frequency fatigue (index of excitation-contraction coupling alteration) were also observed for both muscle groups. Sixteen days after MUM, NMF had returned to initial values, with most of the recovery process occurring within 9 days of the race. These findings suggest that the large alterations in NMF after an ultra-marathon race are multi-factorial, including failure of excitation-contraction coupling, which has never been described after prolonged running. It is also concluded that as early as two weeks after such an extreme running exercise, maximal force capacities have returned to baseline.
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spelling pubmed-30430772011-03-01 Neuromuscular Consequences of an Extreme Mountain Ultra-Marathon Millet, Guillaume Y. Tomazin, Katja Verges, Samuel Vincent, Christopher Bonnefoy, Régis Boisson, Renée-Claude Gergelé, Laurent Féasson, Léonard Martin, Vincent PLoS One Research Article We investigated the physiological consequences of one of the most extreme exercises realized by humans in race conditions: a 166-km mountain ultra-marathon (MUM) with 9500 m of positive and negative elevation change. For this purpose, (i) the fatigue induced by the MUM and (ii) the recovery processes over two weeks were assessed. Evaluation of neuromuscular function (NMF) and blood markers of muscle damage and inflammation were performed before and immediately following (n = 22), and 2, 5, 9 and 16 days after the MUM (n = 11) in experienced ultra-marathon runners. Large maximal voluntary contraction decreases occurred after MUM (−35% [95% CI: −28 to −42%] and −39% [95% CI: −32 to −46%] for KE and PF, respectively), with alteration of maximal voluntary activation, mainly for KE (−19% [95% CI: −7 to −32%]). Significant modifications in markers of muscle damage and inflammation were observed after the MUM as suggested by the large changes in creatine kinase (from 144±94 to 13,633±12,626 UI L(−1)), myoglobin (from 32±22 to 1,432±1,209 µg L(−1)), and C-Reactive Protein (from <2.0 to 37.7±26.5 mg L(−1)). Moderate to large reductions in maximal compound muscle action potential amplitude, high-frequency doublet force, and low frequency fatigue (index of excitation-contraction coupling alteration) were also observed for both muscle groups. Sixteen days after MUM, NMF had returned to initial values, with most of the recovery process occurring within 9 days of the race. These findings suggest that the large alterations in NMF after an ultra-marathon race are multi-factorial, including failure of excitation-contraction coupling, which has never been described after prolonged running. It is also concluded that as early as two weeks after such an extreme running exercise, maximal force capacities have returned to baseline. Public Library of Science 2011-02-22 /pmc/articles/PMC3043077/ /pubmed/21364944 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0017059 Text en Millet et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Millet, Guillaume Y.
Tomazin, Katja
Verges, Samuel
Vincent, Christopher
Bonnefoy, Régis
Boisson, Renée-Claude
Gergelé, Laurent
Féasson, Léonard
Martin, Vincent
Neuromuscular Consequences of an Extreme Mountain Ultra-Marathon
title Neuromuscular Consequences of an Extreme Mountain Ultra-Marathon
title_full Neuromuscular Consequences of an Extreme Mountain Ultra-Marathon
title_fullStr Neuromuscular Consequences of an Extreme Mountain Ultra-Marathon
title_full_unstemmed Neuromuscular Consequences of an Extreme Mountain Ultra-Marathon
title_short Neuromuscular Consequences of an Extreme Mountain Ultra-Marathon
title_sort neuromuscular consequences of an extreme mountain ultra-marathon
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3043077/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21364944
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0017059
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