Research article - (2008)07, 176 - 183 |
Effect of Heat Preconditioning by Microwave Hyperthermia on Human Skeletal Muscle After Eccentric Exercise |
Norio Saga, Shizuo Katamoto, Hisashi Naito |
Key words: delayed-onset muscle soreness, muscle damage, repeated bout effect, heat shock proteins |
Key Points |
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Subjects |
Nine untrained male volunteers (means ± SD: age, 22.9 ± 2.6 yr; height, 1.75 ± 0.06 m; weight, 69.7 ± 11.6 kg) participated in this study. During the experimental period, the subjects were prohibited from using such interventions as icing, heating, massage, and exercise. All subjects were fully informed of the purpose, procedures, and possible risks of the study, and then gave written informed consent. This study was approved by the Juntendo University Human Ethics Committee and was conducted in accordance with the Helsinki Declaration. |
Experimental protocol |
Experimental design and time course of the measurements were summarized in Heat preconditioning (MW) was performed 1 day before the first bout of exercise, with the subjects in a sitting position. One of each subject’s upper arms was randomly selected for exposure to a microwave hyperthermia unit (Microtizer, MT-SDi, Minato Medical Co. Ltd., Osaka, Japan) set at 150 W for 20 min (Nosaka et al., |
Assessment of muscle damage and muscle soreness |
Muscle damage was evaluated based on physiological, biochemical, and subjective markers using a crossover design. MVC, ROM, and upper arm circumference were measured as physiological markers of muscle damage, and blood creatine kinase (CK) activity was used as a biochemical maker. Muscle soreness was evaluated subjectively. Muscle soreness was evaluated before and 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6 days after ECC1 and ECC2, respectively. |
Statistical analysis |
The data are presented as means ± SD. A two-way repeated-measures ANOVA was performed using Treatment (CON vs. MW) by Time as the conditions for ECC1 and ECC2, and Bout (ECC1 vs. ECC2) by Time as the conditions for the CON and MW. Changes from the pre-levels in all makers were analyzed using a one-way ANOVA with Scheffe’s post hoc comparisons for the CON and MW. Statistical significance was set at p < 0.05. |
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One main finding of this study is that decreases in MVC and ROM after ECC1 were attenuated by heat preconditioning with microwave hyperthermia, supporting the hypothesis that heat preconditioning prior to ECC1 results in less eccentric exercise-induced muscle damage and muscle soreness. On the other hand, heat preconditioning did not affect any markers related to muscle damage after ECC2. Thus, the idea that heat preconditioning prior to ECC1 might enhance the repeated bout effect may be rejected. The explanations for our findings are as follows. |
Effect of microwave preconditioning on muscle damage and muscle soreness |
It is believed that eccentric exercise-induced muscle damage and muscle soreness develop through different mechanisms. Eccentric exercise induces ultrastructural muscle damage within the sarcomere, leading to membrane damage and failure of the excitation-contraction coupling pathway (Koh, The mechanism by which muscle damage and muscle soreness occur remains unclear, and we cannot address how heat preconditioning altered the process because we did not measure HSP expression or other biochemical parameters. However, we previously shown that the heat preconditioning protocol used in the present study (150 W, 20 min) increased the temperature of the vastus lateralis muscle to 41 °C and induced both HSP72 and HSP27 within 24 h (Ogura et al., Similar to our findings, Nosaka et al., With regard to a difference in the reported level of muscle soreness, Nosaka et al., |
Effect of microwave preconditioning on the repeated bout effect |
The second main focus of our study, which to our knowledge has not been addressed before, was to examine the effect of heat preconditioning on the repeated bout effect. Although the protective effect of heat preconditioning in ECC1 was demonstrated for MVC and ROM, preconditioning prior to ECC1 did not affect any markers related to muscle damage after ECC2, and there was no significant Treatment (heat preconditioning) by Time interaction for ECC2. In addition, for MVC and ROM, there was a repeated bout effect in the CON but not the MW. The lack of the repeated bout effect in the MW can be attributed to the protection provided by heat preconditioning. That is, there was no additional protective effect following the second bout. One reason why the repeated bout effect was not enhanced by heat preconditioning may be the time interval between heat preconditioning and ECC2. Conceivably, 1 week might be too long to maintain the high level of HSPs induced by heat preconditioning before ECC1, which reduced the level of muscle damage after ECC1. Alternatively, because exercise itself is strong enough to induce HSP expression (Milne and Noble, |
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In the present study, heat preconditioning, applied 1 day prior to ECC1, suppressed the decreases in MVC and ROM, whereas heat preconditioning had no effect on the level of muscle damage caused by the second bout of eccentric exercise. These results suggest that muscle preconditioning with a microwave hyperthermia unit may increase resistance to eccentric exercise- induced muscle damage, although the effect may not extend to repeated bouts of eccentric exercise. |
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS |
This study was supported in part by grants from Juntendo University and Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (16300212 and 16650135 to H.N.) from the Japanese Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology and the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science. |
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY |
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