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Related Concept Videos

Exercise and Muscle Performance01:27

Exercise and Muscle Performance

Exercise induces a range of adaptations in muscle tissue, depending on the type and duration of activity. Such physical training can be broadly categorized into two types: endurance exercises and resistance exercises.
Endurance exercises
Endurance exercises involve running, swimming, or cycling, which require repetitive movements with low force output. When a person engages in endurance exercise, a few noticeable changes occur in their skeletal muscles. For instance, the number of capillaries...
Dose-Response Relationship: Overview01:03

Dose-Response Relationship: Overview

Agonists can bind with and activate receptors, resulting in the formation of drug-receptor complexes. Once formed, these complexes catalyze many biochemical processes at the cellular level and subsequently induce a pharmacologic response. The degree of response is directly proportional to the fraction of activated receptors, which in turn, depends on the concentration of the drug at the receptor site as well as the sensitivity of the receptor. An increase in the administered dose contributes to...
Muscle Stimulation Frequency01:22

Muscle Stimulation Frequency

The contraction strength of muscles is regulated by motor neurons, which modulate the frequency of action potentials dispatched to the motor units based on the body's requirements. This process of varying the muscle stimulation frequency allows muscles to contract with a force that is precisely tailored to the needs of the moment, whether lifting a feather or a heavy box.
Wave summation
At low firing rates, motor neurons induce individual twitch contractions in muscle fibers. These twitches...
Motor Unit Stimulation01:20

Motor Unit Stimulation

When the neuron of a motor unit fires an action potential, it triggers a series of events, leading to a twitch contraction in the muscle fibers. The process of excitation-contraction coupling is crucial in relaying the action potential to the muscle fibers.
The latent period of contraction marks the onset of excitation-contraction coupling, when the action potential propagates across the sarcolemma, preparing the muscle fibers for contraction. As the fibers enter the contraction phase, the...
Design Example: Frog Muscle Response01:14

Design Example: Frog Muscle Response

A student is tasked to work on an intriguing experiment involving an RL (Resistor-Inductor) circuit to study the muscle response of a frog's leg to electrical stimulation. The RL circuit plays a crucial role in this experiment, providing the means to control and measure the electrical impulses that trigger muscle contraction.
When the switch connecting the RL circuit is closed, a brief muscle contraction is observed. This is because, at a steady state, the inductor acts like a short circuit,...
Dose-Response Relationship: Potency and Efficacy01:22

Dose-Response Relationship: Potency and Efficacy

The potency of a drug is the measure of its ability to produce a biological response and can be compared by looking at the half-maximum effective concentration or EC50 values of different drugs. A lower EC50 value indicates higher potency of the drug. In the dose–response curve of two antihypertensive drugs, candesartan and irbesartan, a significant difference is observed in their EC50 values. A lower EC50 value for candesartan indicates that it is more potent than irbesartan, as it produces...

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Related Experiment Video

Updated: May 25, 2026

Ex Vivo Assessment of Contractility, Fatigability and Alternans in Isolated Skeletal Muscles
14:02

Ex Vivo Assessment of Contractility, Fatigability and Alternans in Isolated Skeletal Muscles

Published on: November 1, 2012

Exercise dose response in muscle.

B D Duscha1, B H Annex, J L Johnson

  • 1Division of Rheumatology, Medical Center, Duke University, Durham, NC, USA. brian.duscha@duke.edu

International Journal of Sports Medicine
|January 21, 2012
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Higher exercise amounts, particularly high-intensity training, enhance muscle adaptations like capillary supply and enzyme activity, leading to significant improvements in peak oxygen uptake (VO2 max). Lower exercise doses also induce adaptations but do not correlate with peak VO2 gains.

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Ex Vivo Assessment of Contractility, Fatigability and Alternans in Isolated Skeletal Muscles
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08:33

Induction and Assessment of Exertional Skeletal Muscle Damage in Humans

Published on: December 11, 2016

Area of Science:

  • Exercise physiology
  • Muscle adaptation
  • Cardiovascular training

Background:

  • Exercise enhances peak oxygen uptake (VO2 max) through muscle adaptations.
  • The relationship between specific exercise training doses and muscle adaptations remains incompletely understood.
  • Key muscle adaptations include changes in capillary density and mitochondrial enzyme activity.

Purpose of the Study:

  • To investigate the impact of different exercise training doses on capillary supply (capillaries per fiber and per area) and citrate synthase activity in the vastus lateralis muscle.
  • To determine the relationship between these muscle adaptations and changes in peak VO2.
  • To compare the effects of low amount-moderate intensity, low amount-high intensity, and high amount-high intensity exercise regimens against a control group.

Main Methods:

  • A randomized controlled trial involving four groups: low amount-moderate intensity, low amount-high intensity, high amount-high intensity exercise, and a control group.
  • Measurements included capillary density (capillaries/fiber and capillaries/mm²) and citrate synthase activity in the vastus lateralis muscle.
  • Peak VO2 was assessed to evaluate cardiorespiratory fitness.

Main Results:

  • All exercise groups demonstrated significant increases in capillary supply (p<0.05).
  • Citrate synthase activity improved significantly in the low amount-high intensity and high amount-high intensity groups (p<0.05), with a near-significant trend in the low amount-moderate intensity group (p=0.059).
  • Muscle adaptations were significantly correlated with peak VO2 improvements only in the high amount-high intensity group (r values ranging from -0.304 to -0.318, p<0.05).

Conclusions:

  • Exercise training, even at lower doses, induces muscle adaptations.
  • Significant improvements in peak VO2 are associated with muscle adaptations only following high amount-high intensity exercise.
  • Exercise dose and intensity are critical factors modulating the link between muscle adaptations and enhanced cardiorespiratory fitness.