The Japanese Journal of Physiology
Print ISSN : 0021-521X
TETANIC CONTRACTION AND TENSION-LENGTH RELATION OF FROG VENTRICULAR MUSCLE
真島 英信
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ジャーナル フリー

1977 年 27 巻 3 号 p. 321-335

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抄録
Complete tetanic contraction was generated in frog ventricular muscle by repetitive electrical stimulation.The maximum stimulus was a transverse alternating current at 10Hz and 17-20 V/cm in peak to peak voltage in an external solution containing 9 mM Ca2+.The maximum isometric tension thus obtained was twice or more than that of the twitch tension at 20°C. The tetanic tension and its rate of rise declined with decreasing external Ca2+ concentration and less than half of the maximum tension was generated at 1.8mM Ca2+. Various tetanic tensions less than the maximum were obtained in the partially depolarized muscle in excess K+solution by reducing the stimulus intensity. Adrenaline (5×10-6g/ml) potentiated the submaximal tetanic tension as well as the twitch tension, although no effect was observed for the maximum tetanic tension. The tension-length relation for the tetanic contraction of ventricular muscle was similar to that of the skeletal muscle, but the tension fell almost linearly at shorter lengths than 0.9Lm, where Lm is the optimum length at which the maximum tension, Fm, was generated. Fm was 4.6g/mm2, while the sarcomere length at Lm was 2.0-2.2μm.
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© Physiological Society of Japan
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