Nonthermal Ultrasound and Exercise in Skeletal Muscle Regeneration
2005; Elsevier BV; Volume: 86; Issue: 7 Linguagem: Inglês
10.1016/j.apmr.2004.12.037
ISSN1532-821X
AutoresChad D. Markert, Mark A. Merrick, Timothy E. Kirby, Steven T. Devor,
Tópico(s)Exercise and Physiological Responses
ResumoMarkert CD, Merrick MA, Kirby TE, Devor ST. Nonthermal ultrasound and exercise in skeletal muscle regeneration. Objective To determine whether continuous nonthermal therapeutic ultrasound (US) and low-intensity exercise (Ex) influence skeletal muscle regeneration after a standardized contusion injury in an animal model. Design Randomized controlled trial with blinded comparisons in a 2×2 factorial (US by Ex) design. Setting Animal care facility and exercise physiology biochemistry laboratory. Animals Twenty male Wistar rats (age, 8mo) received a reproducible bilateral contusion injury to the gastrocnemius muscles. Ten gastrocnemius muscles from 5 noninjured, nontreated rats provided baseline control data. Interventions US (continuous duty cycle, 3MHz; intensity, 0.1W/cm2; transducer, 1cm2; duration, 5min/d; duty cycle, 100%) and exercise (20min/d of low-intensity treadmill walking at 14m/min). Gastrocnemius muscles from injured rats received exercise treatment alone (Ex+NoUS), exercise and US treatment (Ex+US), US treatment alone (NoEx+US), and no treatment (NoEx+NoUS). Main Outcome Measures Ninety-six-hour postinjury muscle mass, contractile protein concentration, fiber cross-sectional area, number of nuclei per fiber, and myonuclear density. Results Myonuclei per fiber were statistically greater in injured than in noninjured gastrocnemius muscle (P<.05). There were no statistical differences (P>.01) among the 4 injured treatment groups for any of the outcome measures chosen as biomarkers of skeletal muscle regeneration. Conclusions There is no evidence that the specific continuous US and Ex protocols investigated enhanced skeletal muscle regeneration after contusion injury.
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