1.Is the myonuclear domain ceiling hypothesis dead?
Ferdos AMAN ; Eman EL KHATIB ; Alanood ALNEAIMI ; Ahmed MOHAMED ; Alya Sultan ALMULLA ; Amna ZAIDAN ; Jana ALSHAFEI ; Omar HABBAL ; Salma ELDESOUKI ; Rizwan QAISAR
Singapore medical journal 2023;64(7):415-422
Muscle fibres are multinuclear cells, and the cytoplasmic territory where a single myonucleus controls transcriptional activity is called the myonuclear domain (MND). MND size shows flexibility during muscle hypertrophy. The MND ceiling hypothesis states that hypertrophy results in the expansion of MND size to an upper limit or MND ceiling, beyond which additional myonuclei via activation of satellite cells are required to support further growth. However, the debate about the MND ceiling hypothesis is far from settled, and various studies show conflicting results about the existence or otherwise of MND ceiling in hypertrophy. The aim of this review is to summarise the literature about the MND ceiling in various settings of hypertrophy and discuss the possible factors contributing to a discrepancy in the literature. We conclude by describing the physiological and clinical significance of the MND ceiling limit in the muscle adaptation process in various physiological and pathological conditions.
Humans
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Muscle Fibers, Skeletal/physiology*
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Hypertrophy/pathology*
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Muscle, Skeletal
2.Research progress on muscle spindle morphology.
Wen-Xi LIAN ; Jia-Sheng RAO ; Liu-Fang HAO ; Zi-Jue WANG ; Hong-Mei DUAN ; Zhao-Yang YANG ; Xiao-Guang LI
Acta Physiologica Sinica 2022;74(6):1039-1047
Muscle spindle is the key proprioceptor in skeletal muscles and plays important roles in many physiological activities, such as maintaining posture, regulating movement and controlling speed variation. It has significant clinical relevance and is emerging as a promising therapeutic target for the treatment of motor functional impairment and metabolic diseases. In this review, we summarized muscle spindle distribution and the mechanism of mechanical signal transmission, and reviewed the research progress on morphological and structural characteristics of muscle spindles.
Muscle Spindles/physiology*
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Muscle, Skeletal/physiology*
;
Clinical Relevance
3.Study on surface electromyography characteristics of erector spinae muscles at different spinal anteversion angles of the scrapers.
Ya Li HU ; Ying Jie YU ; Xin Yu HUANG ; Zhen Yu WANG ; Lei WU
Chinese Journal of Industrial Hygiene and Occupational Diseases 2022;40(1):50-53
Objective: To simulate and evaluate the scraping and grinding work of workers with different spinal anteversion angles, and to explore the effects of different anteversion angles on the erector spinae muscles of scrapers. Methods: In November 2019, 16 male college student volunteers were recruited to simulate workers' scraping and grinding work. The parameters were 25°, 15 times/min, 15°, 30 times/min, 5°, 60 times/min respectively. The surface electromyography (sEMG) was used to collect the electromyographic signals of the erector spinae muscles, and the surface electromyographic characteristics of the erector spinae muscles were evaluated with Borg Scale. Results: There were significant differences between the maximum voluntary contraction percentage (MVE%) of the left and right erector spinae muscles groups in the three groups with different spinal anteversion angles (F(left)=13.41, P(left)<0.001; F(right)=4.74, P(right)=0.005) , and the EMG amplitude was higher at 25°, 15 times/min. At 15°, 30 times/min, MVE% of the left side was significantly higher than that of the right side (t=2.58, P=0.021) . There was significant difference in the mean power frequency (MPF) of the right erector spinae muscle in the three groups (F=9.42, P<0.001) , but there was no significant difference in the MPF of the left erector spinae muscle (F=0.30, P=0.823) . The fitting line showed that the left erector spinae muscle showed a downward trend at 5°, 60 times/min (t=-5.39, P=0.012) . Conclusion: Scrapers are less likely to be fatigued when the posture is 15°, 30 times/min, but they are more likely to be fatigued when working at 5°, 60 times/min.
Electromyography
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Humans
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Male
;
Muscle, Skeletal/physiology*
;
Muscles/physiology*
;
Posture/physiology*
4.Design and Experimental Research of Synchronous Acquisition System of EMG and Blood Oxygen Signal.
Mengjie ZANG ; Lidong XING ; Zhiyu QIAN ; Liuye YAO
Chinese Journal of Medical Instrumentation 2023;47(1):54-60
In this study, a surface electromyography (sEMG) and blood oxygen signal real-time monitoring system is designed to explore the changes of physiological signals during muscle fatigue, so as to detect muscle fatigue. The analysis method of sEMG and the principle of blood oxygen detection are respectively introduced, and the system scheme is expounded. The hardware part of the system takes STM32 as the core. Conditioning module composition; blood oxygen signal acquisition is based on near infrared spectroscopy (NIRS), specifically including light source, light source driving, photoelectric conversion, signal conditioning and other modules. The system software part is based on the real-time uC/OS-III software system. The characteristic parameters of sEMG were extracted by isometric contraction local muscle fatigue experiment; the relative changes of oxyhemoglobin (HbO2) and deoxyhemoglobin (Hb) were calculated in the forearm blocking experiment, thereby verifying that the system collects two signals effectiveness.
Muscle, Skeletal
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Oxygen
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Electromyography
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Muscle Fatigue/physiology*
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Computers
5.Evaluation of Muscle Fatigue in Spinal Surgery Instruments Based on sEMG-JASA.
Yuxiao HOU ; Ningbo MAO ; Gengyu CAO ; Li WANG ; Yu ZHANG ; Yu ZHAO
Chinese Journal of Medical Instrumentation 2023;47(3):252-257
Based on the joint analysis of EMG spectrum and amplitude method (JASA), a study on muscle fatigue assessment of spinal surgical instruments based on surface EMG signals was carried out, and a comparative evaluation of the operating comfort before and after the optimization of spinal surgical instruments was completed. A total of 17 subjects were recruited to collect the surface EMG signals of their brachioradialis and biceps. Five surgical instruments before and after optimization were selected for data comparison, and the operating fatigue time proportion of each group of instruments under the same task was calculated based on the RMS and MF eigenvalues. The results showed that when completing the same operation task, the operation fatigue time of the surgical instruments before optimization was significantly higher than that after optimization (P<0.05); there was no significant difference in the fatigue status of brachioradialis and biceps when operating the same instrument (P>0.05). These results provide objective data and reference for the ergonomic design of surgical instruments and fatigue damage protection.
Humans
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Muscle Fatigue/physiology*
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Muscle, Skeletal
;
Electromyography
;
Ergonomics
6.Recognition of walking stance phase and swing phase based on moving window.
Xiaobo GENG ; Peng YANG ; Xinran WANG ; Yanli GENG ; Yu HAN
Journal of Biomedical Engineering 2014;31(2):273-278
Wearing transfemoral prosthesis is the only way to complete daily physical activity for amputees. Motion pattern recognition is important for the control of prosthesis, especially in the recognizing swing phase and stance phase. In this paper, it is reported that surface electromyography (sEMG) signal is used in swing and stance phase recognition. sEMG signal of related muscles was sampled by Infiniti of a Canadian company. The sEMG signal was then filtered by weighted filtering window and analyzed by height permitted window. The starting time of stance phase and swing phase is determined through analyzing special muscles. The sEMG signal of rectus femoris was used in stance phase recognition and sEMG signal of tibialis anterior is used in swing phase recognition. In a certain tolerating range, the double windows theory, including weighted filtering window and height permitted window, can reach a high accuracy rate. Through experiments, the real walking consciousness of the people was reflected by sEMG signal of related muscles. Using related muscles to recognize swing and stance phase is reachable. The theory used in this paper is useful for analyzing sEMG signal and actual prosthesis control.
Artificial Limbs
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Electromyography
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Humans
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Leg
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Muscle, Skeletal
;
physiology
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Walking
;
physiology
7.Research progress on analysis methods in electroencephalography-electromyography synchronous coupling.
Sujiao LI ; Su LIU ; He LAN ; Hongliu YU
Journal of Biomedical Engineering 2019;36(2):334-337
The motor nervous system transmits motion control information through nervous oscillations, which causes the synchronous oscillatory activity of the corresponding muscle to reflect the motion response information and give the cerebral cortex feedback, so that it can sense the state of the limbs. This synchronous oscillatory activity can reflect connectivity information of electroencephalography-electromyography (EEG-EMG) functional coupling. The strength of the coupling is determined by various factors including the strength of muscle contraction, attention, motion intention etc. It is very significant to study motor functional evaluation and control methods to analyze the changes of EEG-EMG synchronous coupling caused by different factors. This article mainly introduces and compares coherence and Granger causality of linear methods, the mutual information and transfer entropy of nonlinear methods in EEG-EMG synchronous coupling, and summarizes the application of each method, so that researchers in related fields can understand the current research progress on analysis methods of EEG-EMG synchronous systematically.
Electroencephalography
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Electromyography
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Humans
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Motor Cortex
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physiology
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Muscle, Skeletal
;
physiology
;
Research
8.Analysis of surface electromyography of back muscle fatigue on sitting and standing position.
Chinese Journal of Industrial Hygiene and Occupational Diseases 2006;24(12):758-759
Adult
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Back
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physiology
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Electromyography
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Humans
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Lumbosacral Region
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physiology
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Male
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Muscle Fatigue
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Muscle, Skeletal
;
physiology
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Posture
;
physiology
9.Low temperature exposure increases IL-6 expression in skeletal muscle cells.
Ben LIU ; Wen-Jing XIU ; Jin-Jie DUAN ; Chun-Jiong WANG
Acta Physiologica Sinica 2022;74(2):201-208
The shivering and nonshivering thermogenesis in skeletal muscles is important for maintaining body temperature in a cold environment. In addition to nervous-humoral regulation, adipose tissue was demonstrated to directly respond to cold in a cell-autonomous manner to produce heat. However, whether skeletal muscle can directly respond to low temperature in an autoregulatory manner is unknown. Transient receptor potential (TRP) channels TRPM8 and TRPA1 are two important cold sensors. In the current study, we found TRPM8 was expressed in mouse skeletal muscle tissue and C2C12 myotubes by RT-PCR. After exposure to 33 °C for 6 h, the gene expression pattern of C2C12 myotubes was significantly changed which was evidenced by RNA-sequencing. KEGG-Pathway enrichment analysis of these differentially expressed genes showed that low temperature changed several important signaling pathways, such as IL-17, TNFα, MAPK, FoxO, Hedgehog, Hippo, Toll-like receptor, Notch, and Wnt signaling pathways. Protein-protein interaction network analysis revealed that IL-6 gene was a key gene which was directly affected by low temperature in skeletal muscle cells. In addition, both mRNA and protein levels of IL-6 were increased by 33 °C exposure in C2C12 myotubes. In conclusion, our findings demonstrated that skeletal muscle cells could directly respond to low temperature, characterized by upregulated expression of IL-6 in skeletal muscle cells.
Animals
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Cold Temperature
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Interleukin-6/metabolism*
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Mice
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Muscle Fibers, Skeletal/metabolism*
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Muscle, Skeletal/physiology*
;
Temperature
10.Squat, stoop, or semi-squat: a comparative experiment on lifting technique.
Zhenglun WANG ; Lei WU ; Jingzhi SUN ; Lihua HE ; Sheng WANG ; Lei YANG
Journal of Huazhong University of Science and Technology (Medical Sciences) 2012;32(4):630-636
There are actually no sufficient data for lifting technique assessment. A laboratory study was undertaken to determine the effect of 3 regular lifting techniques on erector muscle activation, cardiovascular strain and subjective response. Thirty student volunteers participated in the study, and were required to lift a weight with different techniques. Stoop-, squat-, semi-squat-lifting resulted in 3, 2 and 1 time of the highest percentage of the maximum voluntary electrical activation (MVE%) respectively. In the same order, the lowest median frequency (MF) existed 1, 1 and 2 times. Muscle fatigue was 4 times in squat, 36 in semi-squat and 43 in stoop lifting. Heart rate was the highest in squat and lowest in stoop respectively, with a middle level in semi-squat lifting. It may be recommended to adopt mainly the semi-squat technique for daily lifting works. For heavy lifting, it should use the squat technique. Stoop lifting may also be used alternatively but for light things.
Adult
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Biomechanical Phenomena
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physiology
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Female
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Humans
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Lifting
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Male
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Muscle Fatigue
;
physiology
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Muscle, Skeletal
;
physiology
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Young Adult