There is a paucity of data related to understanding the training consequences of functional electric stimulation cycle ergometry (FES-CE) on the maintenance of skeletal muscle form, structure, and function after acute spinal cord injury (SCI). To date, the effect of FES-CE in acute SCI subjects has been limited to measures of lean body mass and not focused on potential alterations to the morphological and physiological characteristics of skeletal muscle. Therefore, the primary aim of the present study was to determine the affect of FES-CE on muscle fiber cross-sectional area (CSAf), as well as to characterize changes in myosin heavy chain (MHC) composition, myonuclear density, and power output on a bicycle ergometer in acute SCI participants. Previous studies utilizing FES-CE training on chronic SCI survivors have reported increases in power output, defined as force input of a particular skeletal muscle or muscle group multiplied by velocity, that range from 5.1-17.1 watts following 8 -52 weeks of FES-CE training (Chilinbeck et al., 1999; Faghri et al., 1992; Hooker et al., 1992; Mohr et al., 1997; Scremin et al., 1999). In contrast, data from the present study demonstrate that the weekly power output averaged 24.5 ± 3.2 watts, which was achieved with 13 weeks of FES-CE training. Thus, the increase in power output found in the present study is substantially greater than seen in previous studies using chronic SCI subjects, suggesting that early intervention utilizing FES-CE training more effectively conserves power output when compared with other electrical stimulation training protocols using chronic SCI patients. A potentially salient adaptation known to result in an increase in power output is an increase in force development and, force production of a given muscle is directly related to its cross-sectional area (CSA). Previous work in chronic SCI subjects indicated the increases in power output were due to increases in either whole muscle CSA (Mohr et al., 1997; Scremin et al., 1999) or CSAf (Chilinbeck et al., 1999). In the present study, there was a 3 times greater increase in power output than reported by Mohr et al. (1997) suggesting that the more substantial attenuation of muscle atrophy observed in this study as a result of the acute intervention, contributed to diminishing the loss of power output (Figure 3). In the present study, the CSAf in SCI subjects decreased by 36% by 4-6 weeks post-injury, and 72% at 17-19 weeks post-injury relative to uninjured control subjects. These data are in close agreement with those of Castro et al. (1999) who reported decreases in CSAf of 37% and 62% 6 and 24 weeks post-injury, respectively. Previous reports state that the CSAf of chronic SCI subjects was 53% to 68% less than the CSAf of uninjured control subjects (Castro et al., 1999; Martin et al., 1992). Therefore, the present data demonstrate a similar progressive loss in CSAf and underscores the observation that the majority of changes in CSAf occur within the first 24 weeks following a spinal cord injury event. The CSAf in the SCI exercise group (IE) of the present study, increased by 63% above pre-training levels after 13 weeks of FES-CE training and was 171% greater than the SCI control group at the same time point post-SCI. Previously, Scremin et al. (1999) and Mohr et al. (1997) reported increases of 31% and 12% in vastus lateralis and thigh CSA respectively; with 1 year of FES-CE training in chronic SCI patients while Chilinbeck et al. (1999) reported a 23% increase in CSAf with 8 weeks of training. However, the increases in both CSAf and whole muscle CSA seen in training chronic SCI subjects are relative to the pre-training CSA, but when the training effect are compared with the CSAf of the uninjured control subjects, there is still an approximate 55% deficit. Thus, the training-induced increases in CSAf in the present study are greater in magnitude than seen in chronic SCI training studies (68% vs. 23%), and occurred following a much shorter training period. Also the CSAf post training in the acute SCI group was only 24% less than the uninjured control group CSAf versus approximately a 55% deficit seen in chronic SCI studies. Collectively, these observations again strongly support early intervention using FES-CE training as more effective in increasing CSAf following SCI. Following SCI muscle decreased power associated with decreases in whole muscle CSA and CSAf , may be partially compensated for through a shift of MHC isoforms from slow to fast (Castro et al., 1999; Burnham et al., 1997). Mohr et al. (1997) reported that in chronic SCI subjects, the MHC composition of the vastus lateralis muscle adapted to 5%, 33%, and 62% for Type I, Type IIa, and Type IIx MHC, respectively. However, in spite of the in spite of the large decrease in power MHC composition in SCI subjects was not different than control at either 6 or 19 weeks post-injury. Similarly, others (Castro et al., 1999) have reported no change in muscle MHC up to six months post-SCI. Therefore, changes in MHC in SCI subjects appears to occur at a slower time course than in other disuse models, such as spaceflight (Day et al., 1995) and further, decreased muscular power in SCI subjects appears to be largely due to decreased CSAf. The present study also showed no changes in MHC composition due to FES-CE training, whereas, studies utilizing FES-CE training with chronic SCI subjects reported changes in MHC isoforms from Type IIx to Type IIa, but no changes in Type I MHC composition (Mohr et al., 1997). One possible reason for no training effect of FES-CE on MHC in the present study was that no shift in MHC had occurred pre- training, therefore no stimulus for a reversal adaptation was present. Another possibility is that while the training stimulus was not great enough to cause shifts in MHC isoform profile, in situ hybridization could have potentially documented an up-regulation of the Type I MHC and down-regulation of Type IIx MHC isoform mRNA as noted by Harridge, et al in their electrical stimulation study involving chronic SCI survivors. The precise stimulus parameters needed to maximally elicit adaptation of MHC isoforms using electrical stimulation are not currently known. One potential cause for lack of a training effect in response to FES with chronic SCI subjects compared to that observed in this study utilizing acute SCI subjects could be a change in the adaptability of the muscle. Muscle adaptations are related to the number of myonuclei present within fibers (Allen et al., 1997). To date no data exist that report alterations in myonuclear density in either acute or chronic SCI patients. Previous studies in non-SCI subjects reported increases in the number of myonuclei with increases in CSAf (Hikida et al., 2000). In the present study, with acute SCI subjects, the loss of CSAf had no effect on myonuclear density. Therefore our data suggest that sufficient myonuclei are retained in acute SCI survivors to facilitate the increase in CSAf and a subsequent increase in power output, with FES-CE training. Thus, our findings on myonuclear density suggest that the large leg muscles of acute SCI patients retain their potential to adapt to functional demands. Although these data demonstrate an enhanced response to FES training in acute SCI subjects relative to chronic SCI subjects, the CSAf had already decreased by 36% at our baseline assessment of 4-6 weeks post-SCI. These data would then suggest that to maximally conserve the cross-sectional area of the muscle, training should start immediately post-injury. However, the time required to recover from surgical stabilization, secure hemodynamic stability, and recover from spinal shock sufficiently to observe muscle contractions in response to stimulation realistically precludes the initiation of a FES-CE training program sooner than our baseline 4-6 weeks post-injury. A potential limitation of this study is the sample size and therefore the applicability of the study to the general SCI population. The small sample size (n = 5 per group) occurred despite recruitment of individuals with SCI from a large Midwestern rehabilitation program with approximately 100 admissions for SCI rehabilitation per year. The recruitment pool was primarily limited by the inclusion criteria that potential subjects must have a motor complete injury and therefore fall within an ASIA A or B (American Spinal Injury Association) injury severity category due to the concern that the active exercise through volitional movement during the concurrent rehabilitation of patients with ASIA C or D type injuries would confound our outcome variables (Maynard et al., 1997). The second largest category of subjects excluded from the study involved injury related issues such as lower extremity fractures precluding FES-CE training, peripheral nerve injuries resulting in an inadequate response to electrical stimulation and thromboembolic disease requiring full dose anticoagulation, thereby precluding a muscle biopsy. Finally, the third significant barrier to subject recruitment involved transportation difficulties to training sessions. |