We used 20 Sprague-Dawley rats approximately 90 days old at the baseline. The rats were housed in individual metabolic cages and were allocated into a creatine (Cr) group and a control (K) group. The experimental animals were fed the standard rat chaw ad libitum. The Cr-group received 60 mg creatine monohydrate (DSM Fine Chemicals, Austria) each day as a supplement to the standard diet (an equivalent of the recommended dose of 20 g for humans) (Ipsiroglu et al., 2001). The K-group received placebo (60 mg dextrose). Both, creatine and placebo were incorporated in minced meat balls, which were completely consumed by rats in the morning. Both groups were trained incrementally by using mixed aerobic-anaerobic workloads - five days a week on a treadmill (Columbus Instruments, Columbus, OH). The duration of the run was progressively increased every day by five minutes, starting from 25 min (27 m·min-1 speed and 15% slope) until the animals were running for 40 min per day (day 4). This duration was maintained till the end of the experiment (Lambert, 1990). The overall duration of the study was 20 days. At the end of the experiment a sprint-test was performed to assess the sprinting performance of the rats. The rats ran on a treadmill (15% elevation) at 27 m/min for 3 min. The speed was then increased to 45 m/min for 30 seconds and again by 10 m/min every 30 seconds until the rat was unable to maintain the pace of the treadmill belt. The highest speed which the rat could maintain for 15 seconds was defined as the maximal sprinting speed (Lambert, 1990). The contractile characteristic of m. tibialis anterior (containing predominantly types IIA and IIB muscle fibers) (Delp and Duan, 1996) of each rat in both groups was evaluated by isolating the right limb muscle under narcosis (thiopental 10 mg/kg). Each muscle was used immediately after removal. The muscle was placed in an organ bath containing Krebs-Henseleit solution, heated to body temperature and thermostatically controlled. The solution was bubbled in a carbonic mixture to maintain muscle feasibility (95% O2 and 5% CO2). The muscle was fixed in the organ bath by traction straps in the inferior rod and in the tensiometer in its superior part. The basic tension was adjusted to 50 gram force (gf) to each investigated muscle (1gf = 0.009807 N). The muscle was stimulated directly by using platinum electrodes placed along the long axis of the muscle. Electrical stimulation was supplied by Grass S44-type stimulator (monophasic pulses 0.5 ms in duration, 10 Hz). The appropriate stimulating voltage was determined by increasing the voltage until the measured force of contraction reached its peak measurements of the isometric-twitch curves. The force displacement transducer was connected to a special converting device which in turn was connected to the PC. The twitch curves were made using computer based software WaveRunner 1.0 (Sigma Plus, Plovdiv, Bulgaria). The following variables of the isometric contractile properties, as defined by Close and Hoh (Close and Hoh, 1968), were measured: 1. initial twitch tension (F0), 2. maximum twitch tension (Fmax), 3. contraction time of maximum twitch tension tFmax, 4. contraction times to Fmax-10%, Fmax-25%, Fmax-50%. 5. the changes in the strength of muscle contraction (as percentage of Fmax) during the whole time of contraction (till the 450th second from the beginning of stimulation) were also evaluated. The right m. soleus (containing predominantly type I muscle fibers) (Delp and Duan, 1996) of each rat was prepared for histochemical analysis of the following oxidative enzymes: LDH (Hess et al., 1958), SDH (Nachlas et al., 1957), and NADH2-cytochrome-c-reductase (Hess et al., 1958). The analysis of the enzyme activity was performed using Microphot microscope (Nikon, Japan) and special software DP Soft (Olympus, Japan). The intensity of enzyme activity was measured by analysis of 22080 fixed pixels (1840x12). The mean value for each field was taken for further calculations. Blood samples were taken from each rat at the end of the experiment to determine the blood glucose, urea, creatinine, AST, ALT, LDH, CPK, and WBC, RBC and PLT count, hemoglobin, hematocrit, mean cell volume (MCV), mean concentration of hemoglobin using a hematological analyzer (CONE, Finland). Statistical analysis: the data were analyzed with the one-way ANOVA and the significance of difference between the variation series was calculated (Statistica 6.0, StatSoft Corp.). To determine statistical significance between groups the orthogonal contrast matrix method was used (Hicks, 1973). All analyses were tested at p < 0.05. The data are presented as mean ± SEM. |