Post-tetanic potentiation of muscle contraction strength (PTP) occurs in cat soleus and gastrocnemius muscles. However, the mechanisms of potentiation are different in these two muscles. Soleus PTP is predominantly a neural event. The application of a high frequency stimulus to the soleus nerve regularly causes each subsequent response to a single stimulus to become repetitive. This post-tetanic repetitive activity (PTR) originates in the motor nerve terminal and is transmitted to the muscle. Consequently each potentiated soleus contraction is a brief tetanus. In gastrocnemius PTR occurs too infrequently to account for PTP. Furthermore, PTP occurs in curarized directly stimulated gastrocnemius muscles to the same extent as in the indirectly stimulated muscle. In this instance PTP is a muscle phenomenon.
Article|
May 01 1964
The Mechanisms of Post-Tetanic Potentiation in Cat Soleus and Gastrocnemius Muscles
Frank G. Standaert
Frank G. Standaert
From the Department of Pharmacology, Cornell University Medical College, New York
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Frank G. Standaert
From the Department of Pharmacology, Cornell University Medical College, New York
Received:
November 18 1963
Online ISSN: 1540-7748
Print ISSN: 0022-1295
Copyright ©, 1964, by The Rockefeller Institute Press
1964
J Gen Physiol (1964) 47 (5): 987–1001.
Article history
Received:
November 18 1963
Citation
Frank G. Standaert; The Mechanisms of Post-Tetanic Potentiation in Cat Soleus and Gastrocnemius Muscles . J Gen Physiol 1 May 1964; 47 (5): 987–1001. doi: https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.47.5.987
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