The response of denervated muscle to long-term stimulation (1985, revisited here in 2014)
In 1985, at a meeting in Abano, I presented results showing that direct stimulation of skeletal muscles with appropriate stimulus patterns prevents the effects of denervation on non-junctional properties of muscle fibers. Hence, it appeared unnecessary to postulate that unknown nerve-derived trophic...
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doaj-13a87c3d915348239f287f337fd907c92020-11-24T21:06:07ZengPAGEPress PublicationsEuropean Journal of Translational Myology2037-74522037-74602014-03-0124110.4081/bam.2014.1.132551The response of denervated muscle to long-term stimulation (1985, revisited here in 2014)Terje Lomo0Institute of Basic Medical Sciences, University of OsloIn 1985, at a meeting in Abano, I presented results showing that direct stimulation of skeletal muscles with appropriate stimulus patterns prevents the effects of denervation on non-junctional properties of muscle fibers. Hence, it appeared unnecessary to postulate that unknown nerve-derived trophic factors control such properties, as posited by the (anterograde) neurotrophic hypothesis. Here I discuss this conclusion in the light of what we know today, particularly with respect to the many lines of evidence that were then taken to support the trophic hypothesis, but which today have alternative interpretations consistent with control by evoked impulse activity. Despite much effort, no one has yet identified any nerve-derived factor consistent with the neurotrophic hypothesis. Reports favoring the existence of neurotrophic factors were numerous before 2000. Now they have essentially disappeared from the literature, including original research papers, textbooks and handbooks, suggesting that the hypothesis is no longer arguable. Thus, the results that I presented in our paper in 1985 seem to have held up rather well.http://www.pagepressjournals.org/index.php/bam/article/view/3294skeletal muscle, neurotrophic hypothesis, denervation, ACh supersensitivity, fast/slow contractile characteristics, electrical stimulation |
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DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Terje Lomo |
spellingShingle |
Terje Lomo The response of denervated muscle to long-term stimulation (1985, revisited here in 2014) European Journal of Translational Myology skeletal muscle, neurotrophic hypothesis, denervation, ACh supersensitivity, fast/slow contractile characteristics, electrical stimulation |
author_facet |
Terje Lomo |
author_sort |
Terje Lomo |
title |
The response of denervated muscle to long-term stimulation (1985, revisited here in 2014) |
title_short |
The response of denervated muscle to long-term stimulation (1985, revisited here in 2014) |
title_full |
The response of denervated muscle to long-term stimulation (1985, revisited here in 2014) |
title_fullStr |
The response of denervated muscle to long-term stimulation (1985, revisited here in 2014) |
title_full_unstemmed |
The response of denervated muscle to long-term stimulation (1985, revisited here in 2014) |
title_sort |
response of denervated muscle to long-term stimulation (1985, revisited here in 2014) |
publisher |
PAGEPress Publications |
series |
European Journal of Translational Myology |
issn |
2037-7452 2037-7460 |
publishDate |
2014-03-01 |
description |
In 1985, at a meeting in Abano, I presented results showing that direct stimulation of skeletal muscles with appropriate stimulus patterns prevents the effects of denervation on non-junctional properties of muscle fibers. Hence, it appeared unnecessary to postulate that unknown nerve-derived trophic factors control such properties, as posited by the (anterograde) neurotrophic hypothesis. Here I discuss this conclusion in the light of what we know today, particularly with respect to the many lines of evidence that were then taken to support the trophic hypothesis, but which today have alternative interpretations consistent with control by evoked impulse activity. Despite much effort, no one has yet identified any nerve-derived factor consistent with the neurotrophic hypothesis. Reports favoring the existence of neurotrophic factors were numerous before 2000. Now they have essentially disappeared from the literature, including original research papers, textbooks and handbooks, suggesting that the hypothesis is no longer arguable. Thus, the results that I presented in our paper in 1985 seem to have held up rather well. |
topic |
skeletal muscle, neurotrophic hypothesis, denervation, ACh supersensitivity, fast/slow contractile characteristics, electrical stimulation |
url |
http://www.pagepressjournals.org/index.php/bam/article/view/3294 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT terjelomo theresponseofdenervatedmuscletolongtermstimulation1985revisitedherein2014 AT terjelomo responseofdenervatedmuscletolongtermstimulation1985revisitedherein2014 |
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