Skeletal muscle (single fiber preparations)
Stretch-shortening cycle (SSC) / eccentric contraction followed by concentric contraction
Force enhancement during concentric contraction
This review highlights that muscle cell-based mechanisms, such as pre-activation and cross-bridge kinetics, contribute significantly to the stretch-shortening cycle effect independently of stretch-reflex activation and tendon energy storage.
Force attained during concentric contraction (active shortening) is transiently enhanced following eccentric contraction (active stretch) in skeletal muscle. This phenomenon is called stretch-shortening cycle (SSC) effect. Since many human movements contain combinations of eccentric and concentric contractions, a better understanding of the mechanisms underlying the SSC effect would be useful for improving physical performance, optimizing human movement efficiency, and providing an understanding of fundamental mechanism of muscle force control. Currently, the most common mechanisms proposed for the SSC effect are (i) stretch-reflex activation and (ii) storage of energy in tendons. However, abundant SSC effects have been observed in single fiber preparations where stretch-reflex activation is eliminated and storage of energy in tendons is minimal at best. Therefore, it seems prudent to hypothesize that factor(s) other than stretch-reflex activation and energy storage in tendons contribute to the SSC effect. In this brief review, we focus on possible candidate mechanisms for the SSC effect, that is, pre-activation, cross-bridge kinetics, and residual force enhancement (RFE) obtained in experimental preparations that exclude/control the influence of stretch-reflex activation and energy storage in tendons. Recent evidence supports the contribution of these factors to the mechanism of SSCs, and suggests that the extent of their contribution varies depending on the contractile conditions. Evidence for and against alternative mechanisms are introduced and discussed, and unresolved problems are mentioned for inspiring future studies in this field of research.
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Atsuki Fukutani
Tadao Isaka
Walter Herzog
Frontiers in Physiology
SHILAP Revista de lepidopterología
Karolinska Institutet
University of Calgary
Ritsumeikan University
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Fukutani et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69dc343c45b398e6439f5540 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3389/fphys.2020.609553
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