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Bed Rest, Exercise Countermeasure and Reconditioning Effects on the Human Resting Muscle Tone System

The human resting muscle tone (HRMT) system provides structural and functional support to skeletal muscle and associated myofascial structures (tendons, fascia) in normal life. Little information is available on changes to the HRMT in bed rest. A set of dynamic oscillation mechanosignals ([Hz], [N/m...

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Autores principales: Schoenrock, Britt, Zander, Vanja, Dern, Sebastian, Limper, Ulrich, Mulder, Edwin, Veraksitš, Alar, Viir, Ragnar, Kramer, Andreas, Stokes, Maria J., Salanova, Michele, Peipsi, Aleko, Blottner, Dieter
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Frontiers Media S.A. 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6037768/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30018567
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2018.00810
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author Schoenrock, Britt
Zander, Vanja
Dern, Sebastian
Limper, Ulrich
Mulder, Edwin
Veraksitš, Alar
Viir, Ragnar
Kramer, Andreas
Stokes, Maria J.
Salanova, Michele
Peipsi, Aleko
Blottner, Dieter
author_facet Schoenrock, Britt
Zander, Vanja
Dern, Sebastian
Limper, Ulrich
Mulder, Edwin
Veraksitš, Alar
Viir, Ragnar
Kramer, Andreas
Stokes, Maria J.
Salanova, Michele
Peipsi, Aleko
Blottner, Dieter
author_sort Schoenrock, Britt
collection PubMed
description The human resting muscle tone (HRMT) system provides structural and functional support to skeletal muscle and associated myofascial structures (tendons, fascia) in normal life. Little information is available on changes to the HRMT in bed rest. A set of dynamic oscillation mechanosignals ([Hz], [N/m], log decrement, [ms]) collected and computed by a hand-held digital palpation device (MyotonPRO) were used to study changes in tone and in key biomechanical and viscoelastic properties in global and postural skeletal muscle tendons and fascia from a non-exercise control (CTR) and an exercise (JUMP) group performing reactive jumps on a customized sledge system during a 60 days head-down tilt bed rest (RSL Study 2015–2016). A set of baseline and differential natural oscillation signal patterns were identified as key determinants in resting muscle and myofascial structures from back, thigh, calf, patellar and Achilles tendon, and plantar fascia. The greatest changes were found in thigh and calf muscle and tendon, with little change in the shoulder muscles. Functional tests (one leg jumps, electromyography) showed only trends in relevant leg muscle groups. Increased anti-Collagen-I immunoreactivity found in CTR soleus biopsy cryosections was absent from JUMP. Results allow for a muscle health status definition after chronic disuse in bed rest without and with countermeasure, and following reconditioning. Findings improve our understanding of structural and functional responses of the HRMT to disuse and exercise, may help to guide treatment in various clinical settings (e.g., muscle tone disorders, neuro-rehabilitation), and promote monitoring of muscle health and training status in personalized sport and space medicine.
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spelling pubmed-60377682018-07-17 Bed Rest, Exercise Countermeasure and Reconditioning Effects on the Human Resting Muscle Tone System Schoenrock, Britt Zander, Vanja Dern, Sebastian Limper, Ulrich Mulder, Edwin Veraksitš, Alar Viir, Ragnar Kramer, Andreas Stokes, Maria J. Salanova, Michele Peipsi, Aleko Blottner, Dieter Front Physiol Physiology The human resting muscle tone (HRMT) system provides structural and functional support to skeletal muscle and associated myofascial structures (tendons, fascia) in normal life. Little information is available on changes to the HRMT in bed rest. A set of dynamic oscillation mechanosignals ([Hz], [N/m], log decrement, [ms]) collected and computed by a hand-held digital palpation device (MyotonPRO) were used to study changes in tone and in key biomechanical and viscoelastic properties in global and postural skeletal muscle tendons and fascia from a non-exercise control (CTR) and an exercise (JUMP) group performing reactive jumps on a customized sledge system during a 60 days head-down tilt bed rest (RSL Study 2015–2016). A set of baseline and differential natural oscillation signal patterns were identified as key determinants in resting muscle and myofascial structures from back, thigh, calf, patellar and Achilles tendon, and plantar fascia. The greatest changes were found in thigh and calf muscle and tendon, with little change in the shoulder muscles. Functional tests (one leg jumps, electromyography) showed only trends in relevant leg muscle groups. Increased anti-Collagen-I immunoreactivity found in CTR soleus biopsy cryosections was absent from JUMP. Results allow for a muscle health status definition after chronic disuse in bed rest without and with countermeasure, and following reconditioning. Findings improve our understanding of structural and functional responses of the HRMT to disuse and exercise, may help to guide treatment in various clinical settings (e.g., muscle tone disorders, neuro-rehabilitation), and promote monitoring of muscle health and training status in personalized sport and space medicine. Frontiers Media S.A. 2018-07-03 /pmc/articles/PMC6037768/ /pubmed/30018567 http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2018.00810 Text en Copyright © 2018 Schoenrock, Zander, Dern, Limper, Mulder, Veraksitš, Viir, Kramer, Stokes, Salanova, Peipsi and Blottner. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
spellingShingle Physiology
Schoenrock, Britt
Zander, Vanja
Dern, Sebastian
Limper, Ulrich
Mulder, Edwin
Veraksitš, Alar
Viir, Ragnar
Kramer, Andreas
Stokes, Maria J.
Salanova, Michele
Peipsi, Aleko
Blottner, Dieter
Bed Rest, Exercise Countermeasure and Reconditioning Effects on the Human Resting Muscle Tone System
title Bed Rest, Exercise Countermeasure and Reconditioning Effects on the Human Resting Muscle Tone System
title_full Bed Rest, Exercise Countermeasure and Reconditioning Effects on the Human Resting Muscle Tone System
title_fullStr Bed Rest, Exercise Countermeasure and Reconditioning Effects on the Human Resting Muscle Tone System
title_full_unstemmed Bed Rest, Exercise Countermeasure and Reconditioning Effects on the Human Resting Muscle Tone System
title_short Bed Rest, Exercise Countermeasure and Reconditioning Effects on the Human Resting Muscle Tone System
title_sort bed rest, exercise countermeasure and reconditioning effects on the human resting muscle tone system
topic Physiology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6037768/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30018567
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2018.00810
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