Summary
Physical education students were subjected to electrical stimulation of relatively high frequency and current amplitude for 19 days. A quantitative study of several morphological parameters was performed on biopsy samples from gastrocnemius, using stereological methods at both light and electron microscopic levels. The main results were: muscle fibre size was increased; nuclear volume was also increased, suggesting that a proliferation of nuclei had occurred; this was paralleled by an increased content of nuclear DNA. The size of single myonuclei was increased, and their heterochromatin fraction was decreased, these changes being most pronounced in type II fibres. The increase in the mitochondrial fraction was also greatest in type II fibres. It is concluded that this type of electrical stimulation has predominant effects on type II fibres.
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Cabric, M., Appell, H.J. & Resic, A. Fine structural changes in electrostimulated human skeletal muscle. Europ. J. Appl. Physiol. 57, 1–5 (1988). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00691229
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00691229