Effect of load during electrical stimulation training in spinal cord injury
- 1 January 2003
- journal article
- clinical trial
- Published by Wiley in Muscle & Nerve
- Vol. 29 (1), 104-111
- https://doi.org/10.1002/mus.10522
Abstract
Electrical stimulation training is known to alter skeletal muscle characteristics after a spinal cord injury, but the effect of load on optimizing the training protocol has not been fully investigated. This study investigated two electrical-stimulation training regimes with different loads on intramuscular parameters of the paralyzed lower limbs. Six paraplegic individuals with a spinal cord injury underwent electrical stimulation training (45 min daily for 3 days per week for 10 weeks). One leg was trained statically with load, and the contralateral leg was trained dynamically with minimal load. Isometric force assessed with 35-HZ stimuli increased significantly in both legs from baseline, with the static-trained leg also being significantly higher than the dynamic-trained leg. The vastus lateralis muscle of the statically trained leg showed a significant increase in type I fibers, fiber cross-sectional area, capillary-to-fiber ratio, and citrate synthase activity when compared to both baseline and the dynamically trained leg. Relative oxygenation of the vastus lateralis muscle as determined by near infrared spectroscopy was also significantly greater after static training. This study indicates that the load that is applied to paralyzed muscle during an electrical stimulation training program is an important factor in determining the amount of muscle adaptation that can be achieved.Keywords
This publication has 29 references indexed in Scilit:
- Training by low‐frequency stimulation of tibialis anterior in spinal cord–injured menMuscle & Nerve, 2002
- Altered contractile properties of the quadriceps muscle in people with spinal cord injury following functional electrical stimulated cycle trainingSpinal Cord, 2000
- Hypertrophy and Transformation of Muscle Fibers in Paraplegic PatientsArtificial Organs, 1997
- Resistance training modesMedicine & Science in Sports & Exercise, 1995
- Musculoskeletal effects of an electrical stimulation induced cycling programme in the spinal injuredSpinal Cord, 1994
- Functional electrical stimulation (FES): muscle histochemical analysisSpinal Cord, 1993
- The effects of exercise training of different intensities on neuromuscular junction morphologyJournal of Neurocytology, 1993
- Musculoskeletal responses of spinal cord injured individuals to functional neuromuscular stimulation-induced knee extension exercise trainingJournal of Rehabilitation Research and Development, 1991
- Effects of Nerve Stimulation on Human MuscleArchives of Neurology, 1976
- Muscle Fiber Types: How Many and What Kind?Archives of Neurology, 1970