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著者: B J Petrof, S B Gottfried, J Eby, J Lamanca, S Levine
雑誌名: J Appl Physiol (1985). 1995 Nov;79(5):1571-7.
Abstract/Text
The present study tested the hypothesis that growth hormone (GH), an anabolic agent, could prevent the abnormalities of diaphragm structure and function associated with short-term administration of the corticosteroid triamcinolone (TR). During a 10-day period, male rats (n = 33) were assigned to control (CTL), TR (1 mg.kg-1.day-1 im), and TR-GH (2 mg.kg-1.day-1 im) groups. Diaphragm weight was significantly reduced in the TR and TR-GH animals compared with the CTL animals, but there was no difference in the diaphragm-to-body weight ratio. Fiber type (I, IIa, and IIx/b) proportions did not differ among the three groups. However, in TR rats there was a significant reduction in the contribution of type IIx/b fibers to total diaphragm cross-sectional area due to marked atrophy (approximately 42% decrease in mean fiber cross-sectional area). There was no significant reversal of TR-induced type IIx/b fiber atrophy by concomitant GH administration. TR and TR-GH groups both exhibited a left-ward shift of the force-frequency relationship and enhanced in vitro fatigue resistance, whereas maximal specific force was unaltered. We conclude that GH does not prevent corticosteroid-induced effects on the diaphragm under these conditions, possibly as a result of reduced nutritional intake associated with TR administration.
PMID 8594016 J Appl Physiol (1985). 1995 Nov;79(5):1571-7.
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