Abstract/Details

Potentiel oxydatif des fibres musculaires chez l'humain: Sa variation, son adaptation et son role dans l'obesite

Theriault, Remy.   Universite Laval (Canada) ProQuest Dissertations Publishing,  1997. NQ25466.

Abstract (summary)

Cette these tente dans un premier temps de mieux definir la diversite du potentiel oxydatif du muscle squelettique humain et dans un deuxieme temps d'etablir si cette diversite contribue a expliquer la presence d'un excedant de graisse chez des individus obeses. Premierement, la capacite oxydative des fibres musculaires varie substantiellement entre les fibres de type I, IIA et IIB. Malgre une plus grande capacite oxydative des fibres de type I, en general, la proportion relative des fibres musculaires du muscle squelettique ne semble pas etre un bon indicateur de la capacite metabolique du muscle chez l'humain. Deuxiemement, la capacite d'adaptation des fibres musculaires n'est pas la meme pour les fibres de type I, IIA ou IIB en reponse a un protocole de stimulation electrique. Les fibres de type II deviennent aussi oxydatives que certaines fibres de type I alors que le profil oxydatif des fibres de type I ne s'altere pas suite a l'augmentation de l'activite contractile. Troisiemement, la diversite metabolique du muscle squelettique semble etre tributaire de la composition corporelle des individus de maniere plus importante que la proportion des types de fibres musculaires. Finalement, une perte de masse corporelle d'environ 8 kg est suffisante pour modifier certaines caracteristiques de la composition du muscle squelettique. Ces modifications musculaires ne semblent toutefois pas etre avantageuses pour les individus obeses puisque l'etat metabolique est tel qu'il pourrait favoriser le regain de poids corporel.

Alternate abstract:

You are viewing a machine translation of selected content from our databases. This functionality is provided solely for your convenience and is in no way intended to replace human translation. Show full disclaimer

This thesis first attempts to better define the diversity of the oxidative potential of human skeletal muscle and secondly to establish whether this diversity contributes to explaining the presence of excess fat in obese individuals. First, the oxidative capacity of muscle fibers varies substantially between type I, IIA and IIB fibers. Despite a greater oxidative capacity of type I fibers, in general, the relative proportion of muscle fibers to skeletal muscle does not appear to be a good indicator of the metabolic capacity of muscle in humans. Second, the adaptation capacity of muscle fibers is not the same for type I, IIA or IIB fibers in response to an electrical stimulation protocol. Type II fibers become as oxidative as certain type I fibers, whereas the oxidative profile of type I fibers does not alter following the increase in contractile activity. Third, the metabolic diversity of skeletal muscle appears to be dependent on the body composition of individuals to a greater extent than the proportion of muscle fiber types. Finally, a loss of body mass of approximately 8 kg is sufficient to modify certain characteristics of the composition of skeletal muscle. However, these muscular modifications do not seem to be advantageous for obese individuals since the metabolic state is such that it could favor the regain of body weight.

Indexing (details)


Subject
Anatomy & physiology;
Animals;
Sports medicine;
Physiology;
Kinesiology
Classification
0575: Kinesiology
0719: Physiology
Identifier / keyword
Health and environmental sciences; Biological sciences; French and English text; aerobic; muscle fibers; obesity; oxidative capacity
Title
Potentiel oxydatif des fibres musculaires chez l'humain: Sa variation, son adaptation et son role dans l'obesite
Alternate title
Oxidative Potential of Muscle Fibers in Humans: Its Variation, Adaptation and Role in Obesity
Author
Theriault, Remy
Number of pages
209
Publication year
1997
Degree date
1997
School code
0726
Source
DAI-B 59/03, Dissertation Abstracts International
Place of publication
Ann Arbor
Country of publication
United States
ISBN
978-0-612-25466-4
Advisor
Simoneau, Jean-Aime
University/institution
Universite Laval (Canada)
University location
Canada -- Quebec, CA
Degree
Ph.D.
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language
English, French
Document type
Dissertation/Thesis
Dissertation/thesis number
NQ25466
ProQuest document ID
304399911
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/docview/304399911/abstract