|
NY Times Article
Correction Appended
One of the
great unanswered questions in physiology is why muscles get tired. The
experience is universal, common to creatures that have muscles, but the
answer has been elusive until now.
Scientists at Columbia say
they have not only come up with an answer, but have also devised, for
mice, an experimental drug that can revive the animals and let them
keep running long after they would normally flop down in exhaustion.
For
decades, muscle fatigue had been largely ignored or misunderstood.
Leading physiology textbooks did not even try to offer a mechanism,
said Dr. Andrew Marks, principal investigator of the new study. A
popular theory, that muscles become tired because they release lactic
acid, was discredited not long ago.
In a report published Monday
in an early online edition of Proceedings of the National Academy of
Sciences, Dr. Marks says the problem is calcium
flow inside muscle cells. Ordinarily, ebbs and flows of calcium in
cells control muscle contractions. But when muscles grow tired, the
investigators report, tiny channels in them start leaking calcium, and
that weakens contractions. At the same time, the leaked calcium
stimulates an enzyme that eats into muscle fibers, contributing to the
muscle exhaustion.
|
Being stuck in an airport isn't fun. ...
Thanks Scott, I finally made it home
Enjoy your time away! What's in the ...
Get home safe, amigo. Sorry to hear a...
Great stuff, Dave. I'm glad the two ...