Work-related pain in extrinsic finger extensor musculature of instrumentalists is associated with intracellular pH compartmentation during exercise.

BACKGROUND: Although non-specific pain in the upper limb muscles of workers engaged in mild repetitive tasks is a common occupational health problem, much is unknown about the associated structural and biochemical changes. In this study, we compared the muscle energy metabolism of the extrinsic fing...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Angel Moreno-Torres, Jaume Rosset-Llobet, Jesus Pujol, Sílvia Fàbregas, Jose-Manuel Gonzalez-de-Suso
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2010-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2817730?pdf=render
id doaj-50937ca5448840708d0970c2d897911b
record_format Article
spelling doaj-50937ca5448840708d0970c2d897911b2020-11-25T01:12:34ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032010-01-0152e909110.1371/journal.pone.0009091Work-related pain in extrinsic finger extensor musculature of instrumentalists is associated with intracellular pH compartmentation during exercise.Angel Moreno-TorresJaume Rosset-LlobetJesus PujolSílvia FàbregasJose-Manuel Gonzalez-de-SusoBACKGROUND: Although non-specific pain in the upper limb muscles of workers engaged in mild repetitive tasks is a common occupational health problem, much is unknown about the associated structural and biochemical changes. In this study, we compared the muscle energy metabolism of the extrinsic finger extensor musculature in instrumentalists suffering from work-related pain with that of healthy control instrumentalists using non-invasive phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy ((31)P-MRS). We hypothesize that the affected muscles will show alterations related with an impaired energy metabolism. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We studied 19 volunteer instrumentalists (11 subjects with work-related pain affecting the extrinsic finger extensor musculature and 8 healthy controls). We used (31)P-MRS to find deviations from the expected metabolic response to exercise in phosphocreatine (PCr), inorganic phosphate (Pi), Pi/PCr ratio and intracellular pH kinetics. We observed a reduced finger extensor exercise tolerance in instrumentalists with myalgia, an intracellular pH compartmentation in the form of neutral and acid compartments, as detected by Pi peak splitting in (31)P-MRS spectra, predominantly in myalgic muscles, and a strong association of this pattern with the condition. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Work-related pain in the finger extrinsic extensor muscles is associated with intracellular pH compartmentation during exercise, non-invasively detectable by (31)P-MRS and consistent with the simultaneous energy production by oxidative metabolism and glycolysis. We speculate that a deficit in energy production by oxidative pathways may exist in the affected muscles. Two possible explanations for this would be the partial and/or local reduction of blood supply and the reduction of the muscle oxidative capacity itself.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2817730?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Angel Moreno-Torres
Jaume Rosset-Llobet
Jesus Pujol
Sílvia Fàbregas
Jose-Manuel Gonzalez-de-Suso
spellingShingle Angel Moreno-Torres
Jaume Rosset-Llobet
Jesus Pujol
Sílvia Fàbregas
Jose-Manuel Gonzalez-de-Suso
Work-related pain in extrinsic finger extensor musculature of instrumentalists is associated with intracellular pH compartmentation during exercise.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Angel Moreno-Torres
Jaume Rosset-Llobet
Jesus Pujol
Sílvia Fàbregas
Jose-Manuel Gonzalez-de-Suso
author_sort Angel Moreno-Torres
title Work-related pain in extrinsic finger extensor musculature of instrumentalists is associated with intracellular pH compartmentation during exercise.
title_short Work-related pain in extrinsic finger extensor musculature of instrumentalists is associated with intracellular pH compartmentation during exercise.
title_full Work-related pain in extrinsic finger extensor musculature of instrumentalists is associated with intracellular pH compartmentation during exercise.
title_fullStr Work-related pain in extrinsic finger extensor musculature of instrumentalists is associated with intracellular pH compartmentation during exercise.
title_full_unstemmed Work-related pain in extrinsic finger extensor musculature of instrumentalists is associated with intracellular pH compartmentation during exercise.
title_sort work-related pain in extrinsic finger extensor musculature of instrumentalists is associated with intracellular ph compartmentation during exercise.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2010-01-01
description BACKGROUND: Although non-specific pain in the upper limb muscles of workers engaged in mild repetitive tasks is a common occupational health problem, much is unknown about the associated structural and biochemical changes. In this study, we compared the muscle energy metabolism of the extrinsic finger extensor musculature in instrumentalists suffering from work-related pain with that of healthy control instrumentalists using non-invasive phosphorus magnetic resonance spectroscopy ((31)P-MRS). We hypothesize that the affected muscles will show alterations related with an impaired energy metabolism. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: We studied 19 volunteer instrumentalists (11 subjects with work-related pain affecting the extrinsic finger extensor musculature and 8 healthy controls). We used (31)P-MRS to find deviations from the expected metabolic response to exercise in phosphocreatine (PCr), inorganic phosphate (Pi), Pi/PCr ratio and intracellular pH kinetics. We observed a reduced finger extensor exercise tolerance in instrumentalists with myalgia, an intracellular pH compartmentation in the form of neutral and acid compartments, as detected by Pi peak splitting in (31)P-MRS spectra, predominantly in myalgic muscles, and a strong association of this pattern with the condition. CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Work-related pain in the finger extrinsic extensor muscles is associated with intracellular pH compartmentation during exercise, non-invasively detectable by (31)P-MRS and consistent with the simultaneous energy production by oxidative metabolism and glycolysis. We speculate that a deficit in energy production by oxidative pathways may exist in the affected muscles. Two possible explanations for this would be the partial and/or local reduction of blood supply and the reduction of the muscle oxidative capacity itself.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC2817730?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT angelmorenotorres workrelatedpaininextrinsicfingerextensormusculatureofinstrumentalistsisassociatedwithintracellularphcompartmentationduringexercise
AT jaumerossetllobet workrelatedpaininextrinsicfingerextensormusculatureofinstrumentalistsisassociatedwithintracellularphcompartmentationduringexercise
AT jesuspujol workrelatedpaininextrinsicfingerextensormusculatureofinstrumentalistsisassociatedwithintracellularphcompartmentationduringexercise
AT silviafabregas workrelatedpaininextrinsicfingerextensormusculatureofinstrumentalistsisassociatedwithintracellularphcompartmentationduringexercise
AT josemanuelgonzalezdesuso workrelatedpaininextrinsicfingerextensormusculatureofinstrumentalistsisassociatedwithintracellularphcompartmentationduringexercise
_version_ 1725165627023294464