Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Title Page
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1. Muscle Fibers, Motor Units, and Motoneurons
- Muscle Heterogeneity
- Orderly Motor Unit Recruitment
- Smaller Motoneurons Are More Excitable
- Membrane Resistivity and Motoneuron Size
- Other Factors Determining Action Potential Generation
- Role of the Axon Initial Segment
- Minimal Firing Rates and Afterhyperpolarization Durations
- Motoneuron Current–Frequency Relationship and Excitability
- Spike Frequency Adaptation
- Motoneuron Persistent Inward Currents (PICs)
- Summary
- 2. Motor Unit Recruitment During Different Types of Movements
- Measuring Human Motor Unit Recruitment
- Influence of Task
- Synergists
- Influence of Pain on Motor Unit Recruitment
- Slow Ramp-and-Hold Isometric Contractions
- Maintained Isometric Contractions
- Isometric Contractions in Various Directions
- Isometric Contractions Versus Movements
- Ballistic Contractions
- Lengthening Contractions
- Cocontraction of Agonists and Antagonists
- Unilateral Versus Bilateral Contractions
- Maximal Voluntary Contractions
- Muscle Histochemistry to Investigate Rhythmic Complex Contractions
- Summary
- 3. Muscle Blood Flow and Metabolism
- Muscle Blood Flow
- Muscle Metabolism
- Summary
- 4. Peripheral Factors in Neuromuscular Fatigue
- Fatigue as Interference With the Contractile Machinery
- Failure of Impulse Propagation Along the Muscle Fiber Membrane
- Peripheral Fatigue Sites Other Than Muscle Membrane and Contractile Machinery
- Research From Animal Experiments
- Summary
- 5. Central Factors in Neuromuscular Fatigue
- Motoneuron Activity During Sustained Contractions
- Isometric Versus Anisometric Tasks
- Rotation of Motor Units?
- Summary
- 6. Muscular Mechanisms in Aerobic Endurance Training
- Chronic Muscle Stimulation
- Coordination of Muscle Protein Systems
- Pretranslational Control
- Translational Control
- Posttranslational Modifications
- Mitochondrial Responses
- Simultaneous Expression of Isoforms
- Adaptations Can Occur Ex Vivo
- Adaptations Appear in a Specific Sequence
- Thresholds of Activity for Adaptation
- Chronic Stimulation and Atrophy
- Metabolic Signals and the Adaptive Response
- Summary
- 7. Neural Mechanisms in Aerobic Endurance Training
- Adaptation of the Neuromuscular Junction
- Responses of Motoneurons
- Adaptations of Spinal Cord Circuits
- Summary
- 8. Muscle Molecular Mechanisms in Resistance Training
- Acute Responses in Protein Synthesis and Degradation
- Connective Tissue Responses
- Role of Muscle Damage
- Role of Dietary Supplements
- Summary
- 9. Muscle Property Changes in Resistance Training
- Increased Muscle Fiber Cross-Sectional Area
- Fiber Type Composition
- Muscle Fiber Number
- Muscle Composition
- Muscle Architecture
- Muscle Fiber Ultrastructure
- Tendons
- Evoked Isometric Contractile Properties
- Changes in Muscle Force, Velocity, and Power
- Fatigue Resistance
- Role of Eccentric Contractions
- Concurrent Resistance and Aerobic Training: Detrimental to Strength Development?
- Summary
- 10. Neural Mechanisms in Resistance Training
- Gains in Strength Versus Muscle Girth
- Strength Gains Show Task Specificity
- Surface EMG Response During MVC
- Imaginary Strength Training
- Reflex Adaptations
- Cross Education
- Decreased Activation of Antagonists
- Changes in Motor Unit Recruitment
- Supraspinal Changes
- Summary
- 11. Clinical Considerations Concerning Neuromuscular Exercise and Training
- Effects of Exercise on Neuromuscular Aging
- Effects of Exercise Training in Stroke Patients
- Physical Activity and Fibromyalgia
- Exercise and Dementia
- Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis
- Summary
- References
- Index
- About the Author
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