glycogen and Constriction--Pathologic

glycogen has been researched along with Constriction--Pathologic* in 1 studies

Other Studies

1 other study(ies) available for glycogen and Constriction--Pathologic

ArticleYear
Skeletal muscle hypertrophy after chronic restriction of venous blood flow in rats.
    Medicine and science in sports and exercise, 2005, Volume: 37, Issue:7

    Some previous studies have shown that resistance exercise training with venous occlusion causes an enhanced hypertrophy in human muscles. To investigate the effects of blood flow on muscular size at either cellular or subcellular level, we developed an animal model in which several veins from hindlimb muscles of the rat are surgically crush-occluded.. Twenty-four male Wister rats were randomly assigned into either a group for sham operation (sham group) or a group for venous occlusion (experimental group; N = 12 for each group). Fourteen days after the operation, plantaris, soleus, gastrocnemius, extensor digitorum longus, and tibialis anterior muscles were dissected from hindlimbs and subjected to morphological and biochemical analyses.. Fourteen days after the operation, the muscles expect for soleus showed similar increases in wet weight/body weight (by 7-12%) as compared with the sham-operated group (P < 0.05). Further analyses on the plantaris muscle showed increases in muscle dry weight/ body weight (by 10%) and the concentrations of myofibrillar protein (by 23%), glycogen (by 93%) and lactate (by 23%) after the operation (P < 0.05). Mean fiber cross-sectional area was larger by 34% in the experimental group than in the sham-operated group (P < 0.01). The content of HSP-72 increased, whereas that of myostatin protein decreased (P < 0.01). The expression of nitric oxide synthase-1 (NOS-1) mRNA increased (P < 0.01), whereas that of IGF-1 mRNA showed no significant change (P = 0.36). Although the muscle nitric oxide (NO) concentration tended to increase, but the change was not significant (P = 0.10).. Changes in muscle blood flow may affect the muscular size through actions of HSP-72, myostatin, and NOS-1.

    Topics: Animals; Base Sequence; Constriction, Pathologic; DNA Primers; Glycogen; Heat-Shock Proteins; HSP72 Heat-Shock Proteins; Hypertrophy; Japan; Lactic Acid; Male; Muscle, Skeletal; Myostatin; Nitric Oxide Synthase; Rats; Rats, Wistar; Transforming Growth Factor beta

2005