Journal of applied physiology (Bethesda, Md. : 1985)

Isometric strength training increases muscle strength and changes muscle tissue in mice lacking dystrophin

Updated

Abstract

Isometric resistance exercise increased isometric torque by 28% and contractility rates by 22-28% in dystrophin-deficient mice.

  • Three isometric training sessions improved in vivo isometric torque by 22% and contractility rates by 54% in mdx mice.
  • Mice with a Becker muscular dystrophy mutation exhibited similar torque increases (22%) as mdx mice, while wild-type mice showed only an 11% change.
  • Adaptations in muscle function peaked 3 days post-training but diminished after 7 days without retraining.
  • Six training sessions over 4 weeks led to reduced fibrosis and greater uniformity in fiber sizes, along with increased satellite cell numbers in the tibialis anterior muscle compared to untrained muscle.
  • Ex vivo analysis showed trained extensor digitorum longus muscles had greater absolute isometric force and lower susceptibility to force loss from eccentric contractions.

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