Weakness or asthenia is a symptom of a number of different conditions. The causes are many and can be divided into conditions that have true or perceived muscle weakness. True muscle weakness is a primary symptom of a variety of skeletal muscle diseases, including muscular dystrophy and inflammatory myopathy. It occurs in neuromuscular junction disorders, such as myasthenia gravis.
Differential
diagnosis
True vs.
perceived weakness
True
weakness (or neuromuscular) describes a condition where the force exerted by
the muscles is less than would be expected, for example muscular dystrophy.
Perceived
weakness (or non-neuromuscular) describes a condition where a person feels more
effort than normal is required to exert a given amount of force but actual
muscle strength is normal, for example chronic fatigue syndrome.
In some
conditions, such as myasthenia
gravis, muscle strength is normal when resting, but true weakness occurs
after the muscle has been subjected to exercise. This is also true for some
cases of chronic fatigue syndrome, where objective
post-exertion muscle weakness with delayed recovery time has been measured and
is a feature of some of the published definitions.
Asthenia vs.
myasthenia
Asthenia (Greek: ἀσθένεια,
lit. lack of strength but also disease) is a medical term
referring to a condition in which the body lacks or has lost strength either as
a whole or in any of its parts. It denotes symptoms of physical weakness and loss
of strength. General asthenia occurs in many chronic wasting diseases (such
as tuberculosis and cancer), sleep disorders or chronic disorders of the heart,
lungs or kidneys, and is probably most marked in diseases of the adrenal gland.
Asthenia may be limited to certain organs or
systems of organs, as in asthenopia, characterized by ready fatiguability. Asthenia
is also a side effect of some medications and treatments, such as Ritonavir (a protease inhibitor used in HIV treatment),
vaccines such as the HPV vaccine Gardasil and fentanyl patches
(an opioid used
to treat pain).
Differentiating
psychogenic (perceived) asthenia and true asthenia from myasthenia is often
difficult, and in time apparent psychogenic asthenia accompanying many chronic
disorders is seen to progress into a primary weakness.
Myasthenia
(my- from Greek μυο meaning "muscle" + -asthenia ἀσθένεια meaning
"weakness"), or simply muscle weakness, is a lack of muscle strength.
The causes are many and can be divided into conditions that have either true or
perceived muscle weakness. True muscle weakness is a primary symptom of a
variety of skeletal muscle diseases, including muscular dystrophy and
inflammatory myopathy. It occurs in neuromuscular diseases, such as myasthenia
gravis.
Types
Muscle
fatigue can be central, neuromuscular, or peripheral muscular. Central muscle
fatigue manifests as an overall sense of energy deprivation, and peripheral
muscle weakness manifests as a local, muscle-specific inability to do work. Neuromuscular
fatigue can be either central or peripheral.
Central
fatigue
The central
fatigue is generally described in terms of a reduction in the neural drive
or nerve-based motor command to working muscles that results in a decline in
the force output. It has
been suggested that the reduced neural drive during exercise may be a
protective mechanism to prevent organ failure if the work was continued at the
same intensity. The
exact mechanisms of central fatigue are unknown, though there has been a great
deal of interest in the role of serotonergic pathways.
Neuromuscular
fatigue
Nerves control
the contraction of muscles by determining the number, sequence, and force of
muscular contraction. When a nerve experiences synaptic
fatigue it becomes unable to stimulate the muscle that it innervates.
Most movements require a force far below what a muscle could potentially
generate, and barring pathology, neuromuscular fatigue is seldom an issue.
For
extremely powerful contractions that are close to the upper limit of a muscle's
ability to generate force, neuromuscular fatigue can become a limiting factor
in untrained individuals. In novice strength
trainers, the muscle's ability to generate force is most strongly limited
by nerve’s ability to sustain a high-frequency
signal. After an extended period of maximum contraction, the nerve’s signal
reduces in frequency and the force generated by the contraction diminishes.
There is no sensation of pain or discomfort, the muscle appears to simply ‘stop
listening’ and gradually cease to move, often lengthening. As there is insufficient stress on
the muscles and tendons, there will often be no delayed onset muscle soreness following
the workout. Part of the process of strength training is increasing the nerve's
ability to generate sustained, high frequency signals which allow a muscle to
contract with their greatest force. It is this "neural training" that
causes several weeks worth of rapid gains in strength, which level off once the
nerve is generating maximum contractions and the muscle reaches its physiological
limit. Past this point, training effects increase muscular strength through
myofibrillar or sarcoplasmic hypertrophy and metabolic fatigue becomes
the factor limiting contractile force.
Peripheral
muscle fatigue
Peripheral
muscle fatigue during physical work is considered[by whom?] an
inability for the body to supply sufficient energy or other metabolites to the
contracting muscles to meet the increased energy demand. This is the most
common case of physical fatigue—affecting a national[where?] average
of 72% of adults in the work force in 2002. This causes contractile dysfunction
that manifests in the eventual reduction or lack of ability of a single muscle
or local group of muscles to do work. The insufficiency of energy, i.e.
sub-optimal aerobic metabolism, generally results in the
accumulation of lactic acid and other acidic anaerobic
metabolic by-products in the muscle, causing the stereotypical burning
sensation of local muscle fatigue, though recent studies have indicated
otherwise, actually finding that lactic acid is a source of energy.
The
fundamental difference between the peripheral and central theories of muscle
fatigue is that the peripheral model of muscle fatigue assumes failure at one
or more sites in the chain that initiates muscle contraction. Peripheral
regulation therefore depends on the localized metabolic chemical conditions of
the local muscle affected, whereas the central model of muscle fatigue is an
integrated mechanism that works to preserve the integrity of the system by
initiating muscle fatigue through muscle derecruitment, based on collective
feedback from the periphery, before cellular or organ failure occurs.
Therefore, the feedback that is read by this central regulator could include
chemical and mechanical as well as cognitive cues. The significance of each of
these factors will depend on the nature of the fatigue-inducing work that is
being performed.
Though not
universally used, "metabolic fatigue" is a common alternative term
for peripheral muscle weakness, because of the reduction in contractile force
due to the direct or indirect effects of the reduction of substrates or
accumulation of metabolites within the myocytes.
This can occur through a simple lack of energy to fuel contraction, or through
interference with the ability of Ca2+ to stimulate actin and myosin to
contract.
Lactic acid
hypothesis
It was once
believed that lactic acid build-up was the cause of muscle
fatigue. The
assumption was lactic acid had a "pickling" effect on muscles,
inhibiting their ability to contract. The impact of lactic acid on performance
is now uncertain, it may assist or hinder muscle fatigue.
Produced as
a by-product of fermentation, lactic acid can increase
intracellular acidity of muscles. This can lower the sensitivity of contractile
apparatus to calcium ions (Ca2+) but also has the effect of
increasing cytoplasmic Ca2+ concentration through an
inhibition of the chemical pump that actively
transports calcium out of the cell. This counters inhibiting effects
of potassium
ions (K+) on muscular action potentials. Lactic acid also has a
negating effect on the chloride ions in the muscles, reducing their inhibition
of contraction and leaving K+ as the only restricting influence on muscle
contractions, though the effects of potassium are much less than if there were
no lactic acid to remove the chloride ions. Ultimately, it is uncertain if
lactic acid reduces fatigue through increased intracellular calcium or
increases fatigue through reduced sensitivity of contractile proteins to Ca2+.
Pathophysiology
Main
article: muscle contraction
Muscle cells
work by detecting a flow of
electrical impulses from the brain, which signals them to contract through the release of calcium by
the sarcoplasmic reticulum. Fatigue (reduced
ability to generate force) may occur due to the nerve, or within the muscle
cells themselves. New research from scientists at Columbia University suggests
that muscle fatigue is caused by calcium leaking out of the muscle cell. This
makes less calcium available for the muscle cell. In addition, the Columbia
researchers propose that an enzyme activated by this released calcium eats away
at muscle fibers.
Substrates within the muscle
generally serve to power muscular contractions. They include molecules such as adenosine triphosphate (ATP), glycogen and creatine
phosphate. ATP binds to the myosin head and
causes the ‘ratchetting’ that results in contraction according to the sliding filament model. Creatine
phosphate stores energy so ATP can be rapidly regenerated within the muscle
cells from adenosine diphosphate (ADP) and
inorganic phosphate ions, allowing for sustained powerful contractions that
last between 5–7 seconds. Glycogen is the intramuscular storage form of glucose, used to
generate energy quickly once intramuscular creatine stores are exhausted,
producing lactic acid as a metabolic byproduct. Contrary to
common belief, lactic acid accumulation doesn't actually cause the burning
sensation we feel when we exhaust our oxygen and oxidative metabolism, but in
actuality, lactic acid in presence of oxygen recycles to produce pyruvate in
the liver, which is known as the Cori cycle.
Substrates
produce metabolic fatigue by being depleted during exercise, resulting in a
lack of intracellular energy sources to fuel contractions. In essence, the
muscle stops contracting because it lacks the energy to do so.
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Weakness
No comments:
Post a Comment