In Vivo Studies on Fast and Slow Muscle Fibers in Cat Extraocular Muscles
Open Access
- 1 July 1966
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rockefeller University Press in The Journal of general physiology
- Vol. 49 (6) , 1177-1198
- https://doi.org/10.1085/jgp.0491177
Abstract
In anesthetized in vivo preparations, responses of two types of extraocular muscle fibers have been studied. The small, multiply innervated slow fibers have been shown to be capable of producing propagated impulses, and thus have been labeled slow multi-innervated twitch fibers. Fast and slow multi-innervated twitch fibers are distinguished by impulse conduction velocities, by ranges of membrane potentials, by amplitudes and frequencies of the miniature end plate potentials, by responses to the intravenous administration of succinylcholine, by the frequency of stimulation required for fused tetanus, and by the velocities of conduction of the nerve fibers innervating each of the muscle fiber types.This publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Some properties of avian skeletal muscle fibres with multiple neuromuscular junctionsThe Journal of Physiology, 1960
- Spontaneous activity in muscle fibres of the chickThe Journal of Physiology, 1960
- Differentiation of fast and slow muscles in the cat hind limbThe Journal of Physiology, 1960
- Spontaneous potentials in slow muscle fibres of the frogThe Journal of Physiology, 1957
- Neuromuscular facilitation by stretch of motor nerve‐endingsThe Journal of Physiology, 1956
- The electrical properties of the slow muscle fibre membraneThe Journal of Physiology, 1956
- Spontaneous subthreshold activity at mammalian neuromuscular junctionsThe Journal of Physiology, 1956
- Quantal components of the end‐plate potentialThe Journal of Physiology, 1954
- Small‐nerve junctional potentials. The distribution of small motor nerves to frog skeletal muscle, and the membrane characteristics of the fibres they innervate*The Journal of Physiology, 1953
- ANALYSIS OF FUNCTION OF A NERVE TO MUSCLEAmerican Journal of Physiology-Legacy Content, 1934