The Journal of Physiological Sciences
Online ISSN : 1880-6562
Print ISSN : 1880-6546
ISSN-L : 1880-6546
Volume 57, Issue 4
Displaying 1-8 of 8 articles from this issue
Regular Papers
  • A. Temfemo, C. Laparadis, D. Bishop, A. Merzouk, S. Ahmaidi
    2007 Volume 57 Issue 4 Pages 203-210
    Published: 2007
    Released on J-STAGE: October 10, 2007
    Advance online publication: June 14, 2007
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The purpose of the present study was to determine whether there are any differences in power output (PO) and/or quadriceps muscle (Quad) activity between black African and Caucasian football players during a force-velocity (fv) exercise test, which consisted of performing maximal 6-s sprints against an increasing load. Each subject started the test with a load of 2 kg and then recovered for 5 min before repeating the same test with a load increased by 2 kg. When the pedal frequency did not exceed 130 rev·min−1, the load was increased by only 1 kg. Each subject attained the load corresponding to his maximal power if an additional increase in load (+1 kg) induced a power decrease. Nine black Africans (mean age 24.2 ± 3.3 years) and nine Caucasians (24.7 ± 4.2 years) (matched for stature and aerobic fitness) participated in the fv exercise test. During the test, PO, blood lactate, and the quadriceps electromyography (EMG) root mean square (Quad RMS) were assessed. Higher blood lactate was observed in Caucasians than in black Africans for POs over the load range from 4 kg up to the maximal power. However, PO and Quad RMS values were similar in Caucasians and black Africans. They also had similar lean leg volume (LLV) and consequently produced similar PO/LLV and Quad RMS/LLV values. Overall, our results suggest that Caucasians and black Africans matched for stature, VO2max, and training background have similar PO and Quad RMS values, but different blood lactate concentrations during brief, intermittent, intense exercise performed on a cycloergometer.
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  • Yoshinobu Maruhashi, Katsuhiko Kitaoka, Yumiko Yoshiki, Ryuichi Nakamu ...
    2007 Volume 57 Issue 4 Pages 211-216
    Published: 2007
    Released on J-STAGE: October 10, 2007
    Advance online publication: June 28, 2007
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Depending on intensity, eccentric exercise is experimentally and clinically documented to have opposing dual effects on skeletal muscle; intense eccentric exercise damages muscle, but daily low-load eccentric exercise prevents damage. To clarify the mechanisms of this dual effect, microscopic damage and oxidative stress were studied in rat quadriceps muscle. Oxidative stress was estimated from an immunostaining of advanced glycation end-products (AGE) and a measurement of muscle tissue preparations, the ability to scavenge reactive oxygen species (ROS). Intense eccentric downhill running (IEE) induced muscle damage that was, microscopically apparent 3 days later. Since AGE-positive cells and decreased ROS scavenging activity were observed earlier (on the day after IEE), cellular damage may be related to ROS production. Intense concentric uphill running (ICE) induced an immediate but transient decrease in ROS scavenging activity, which recovered within a day. Neither AGE-positive cells nor microscopic damage was observed after ICE. Since each contracting muscle fiber develops greater tension during eccentric rather than concentric exercise, the initial trigger of IEE-induced muscle damage may be damage to muscle fibers and connective tissues at the subcellular level. Daily low-load training of eccentric downhill running (LET), but not concentric uphill running, efficiently prevented muscle damage after subsequent IEE. No evident elevation of ROS scavenging activity was evident after LET. We concluded that LET prevents IEE-induced muscle damage not through elevated ROS scavenging activity, but through a suppression of initial subcellular damage that triggers subsequent ROS-producing processes, resulting in cellular delayed damage.
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  • Montri Phothisonothai, Masahiro Nakagawa
    2007 Volume 57 Issue 4 Pages 217-226
    Published: 2007
    Released on J-STAGE: October 10, 2007
    Advance online publication: July 19, 2007
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The objective of this study is to analyze the spontaneous electroencephalographic (EEG) data corresponding to body parts movement imagery tasks in terms of fractal properties. We proposed the six algorithms of fractal dimension (FD) estimators; box-counting algorithm, Higuchi algorithm, variance fractal algorithm, detrended fluctuation analysis, power spectral density analysis, and critical exponent analysis. The different parts of human body movement imagination such as feet, tongue, and index finger are proposed for use as the tasks in this experiment. The EEG data were recorded from three healthy subjects (2 males and 1 female). The experimental results are useful in the measurement of FD changes in EEG data and present different characteristics in terms of variability. The probability density function (PDF) is also applied to show that the FD distribution is along each electrode. This study proposes that the performances of each method can extract information from the EEG data of imagined movement.
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  • Sae Uchida, Harumi Hotta, Tomoko Hanada, Yuka Okuno, Yoshihiro Aikawa
    2007 Volume 57 Issue 4 Pages 227-233
    Published: 2007
    Released on J-STAGE: October 10, 2007
    Advance online publication: August 02, 2007
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    The effects of thermal stimulation, applied to the hindpaw via a hot bath set to either 40°C (non-noxious) or 49°C (noxious), upon ovarian blood flow were examined in nonpregnant anesthetized rats. Ovarian blood flow was measured using a laser Doppler flowmeter. Blood pressure was markedly increased following 49°C stimulation. Ovarian blood flow, however, showed no obvious change during stimulation, although a small increase was observed after stimulation. Ovarian blood flow and blood pressure responses to 49°C stimulation were abolished after hindlimb somatic nerves proximal to the stimuli were cut. Heat stimulation (49°C) resulted in remarkable increases in both ovarian blood flow and blood pressure in rats in which the sympathetic nerves supplying the ovary were cut but the hindlimb somatic nerves remained intact. The efferent activity of the ovarian plexus nerve was increased during stimulation at 49°C. Stimulation at 40°C had no effect upon ovarian blood flow, blood pressure or ovarian plexus nerve activity. Electrical stimulation of the distal part of the severed ovarian plexus nerve resulted in a decrease in both the diameter of ovarian arterioles, observed using a digital video microscope, and ovarian blood flow.The present results demonstrate that noxious heat, but not non-noxious warm, stimulation of the hindpaw skin in anesthetized rats influences ovarian blood flow in a manner that is attributed to reflex responses in ovarian sympathetic nerve activity and blood pressure.
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  • Kohsuke Kitani, Shigeo Oguma, Tei-ichi Nishiki, Iori Ohmori, Herv&eacu ...
    2007 Volume 57 Issue 4 Pages 235-239
    Published: 2007
    Released on J-STAGE: October 10, 2007
    Advance online publication: September 15, 2007
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Exendin-4 (Ex4) is a peptide found in the lizard Heloderma suspectum, and it has a high similarity to glucagon-like peptide 1 (GLP-1). It induces insulin secretion without the risk of hypoglycemic episodes. Cyclin-dependent kinase 5 (Cdk5) is a serine/threonine kinase that is predominantly expressed in neurons. Recent studies have shown that this kinase regulates glucose-stimulated insulin secretion. Cdk5 inhibition enhances insulin secretion under conditions of stimulation by high glucose, but not low glucose. In the present study, we examined whether R-roscovitine (R-ros), a Cdk5 inhibitor, enhances insulin secretion induced by Ex4. R-ros induced Ex4-dependent insulin secretion under conditions of high glucose, but not low glucose in MIN6B1 cells. The enhancement by R-ros was also observed in db/db mice, a mouse model of type 2 diabetes. Moreover, long-term treatment with Ex4 and R-ros significantly improved HbA1c compared with treatment using only Ex4. These results suggest that a co-application of R-ros and Ex4 may become a promising therapy for the treatment of type 2 diabetes.
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  • Youzou Isii, Kanji Matsukawa, Hirotsugu Tsuchimochi, Tomoko Nakamoto
    2007 Volume 57 Issue 4 Pages 241-248
    Published: 2007
    Released on J-STAGE: October 10, 2007
    Advance online publication: September 15, 2007
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS
    Cutaneous receptors stimulated by ice-water immersion of one hand will increase sympathetic nerve activity to the palm skin in the nonimmersed contralateral hand and reduce blood flow, reflecting on a decrease in skin surface temperature under a constant ambient environment. To test the hypothesis that gender might affect the contralateral vasoconstrictor response, we analyzed the spatiotemporal pattern of palm skin surface temperature during ice-water immersion for 10 min using thermography in eight males and eight females. As soon as the left hand was immersed in ice-water, palm skin temperature in the nonimmersed right hand quickly decreased in all subjects, particularly in the periphery of the digits and palm. The reduction in skin temperature was short-lasting in 63% of males and 38% of females, but it lasted throughout immersion in the remaining subjects. The average decrease in palm skin temperature was not significantly different between males and females, though it tended to be greater in males. The mean arterial blood pressure significantly increased and heart rate decreased during immersion in males, whereas no substantial cardiovascular changes were observed in females. Cold sensation was well coincident with the appearance of a reduction in the palm skin temperature. In consideration of all these results, we suggest that cutaneous cold stimuli increased skin sympathetic nerve activity in the nonimmersed hand and reduced skin blood flow. We also contend that gender difference in the contralateral vasoconstrictor response was denied because the time course and magnitude of the decrease in palm skin temperature were not different between males and females.
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