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Muscle memory
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===Strength training and adaptations=== {{See also|Muscle memory (strength training)}} When participating in any sport, new motor skills and movement combinations are frequently being used and repeated. All sports require some degree of strength, endurance training, and skilled reaching in order to be successful in the required tasks. Muscle memory related to [[Muscle memory (strength training)|strength training]] involves elements of both motor learning, described below, and long-lasting changes in the muscle tissue. Evidence has shown that increases in strength occur well before muscle [[hypertrophy]], and decreases in strength due to detraining or ceasing to repeat the exercise over an extended period of time precede muscle [[atrophy]].<ref name = "Adkins">{{cite journal | last1 = Adkins | first1 = DeAnna L. | last2 = Boychuck | first2 = Jeffery | year = 2006 | title = Motor training induces experience specific patterns of plasticity across motor cortex and spinal cord | journal = Journal of Applied Physiology | volume = 101 | issue = 6| pages = 1776β1782 | doi=10.1152/japplphysiol.00515.2006 | pmid=16959909| s2cid = 14285824 }}</ref> To be specific, strength training enhances [[motor neuron]] excitability and induces [[synaptogenesis]], both of which would help in enhancing communication between the nervous system and the muscles themselves.<ref name = "Adkins" /> [[File:US Navy 071017-N-0995C-008 Chief Mineman Kevin Sperling, an officer recruiter at Navy Recruiting Processing Station Honolulu, presses two 105-pound dumbbells.jpg|thumb|right|alt=A navy man performs strength training exercises.]]However, neuromuscular efficacy is not altered within a two-week time period following cessation of the muscle usage; instead, it is merely the [[neuron]]'s ability to excite the muscle that declines in correlation with the muscle's decrease in strength.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Deschenes Michael | first1 = R. | last2 = Giles Jennifer | first2 = A. | year = 2002 | title = Neural factors account for strength decrements observed after short-term muscle unloading | journal = American Journal of Physiology. Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology | volume = 282 | issue = 2| pages = R578βR583 | doi=10.1152/ajpregu.00386.2001| pmid = 11792669 }}</ref> This confirms that muscle strength is first influenced by the inner neural circuitry, rather than by external physiological changes in the muscle size. Previously untrained muscles will acquire newly formed nuclei through the fusion of satellite cells preceding hypertrophy. Subsequent detraining will result in atrophy and the loss of myo-nuclei. While it was long believed that a muscle memory effect related to myo-nuclei permanence existed, current studies establish that during detraining, myo-nuclei will be lost.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Snijders |first1=Tim |last2=Aussieker |first2=Thorben |last3=Holwerda |first3=Andy |last4=Parise |first4=Gianni |last5=van Loon |first5=Luc J C |last6=Verdijk |first6=Lex B |title=The concept of skeletal muscle memory: Evidence from animal and human studies |journal=Acta Physiologica|date=2020 |volume=229 |issue=3 |pages=e13465 |doi=10.1111/apha.13465 |pmid=32175681 |pmc=7317456 }}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Rahmati |first1=Masoud |last2=Mc Carthy |first2=John H. |last3=Malakoutinia |first3=Fatemeh |title=Myonuclear permanence in skeletal muscle memory: a systematic review and meta-analysis of human and animal studies |journal=Journal of Cachexia, Sarcopenia and Muscle|date=2022 |volume=13 |issue=5 |pages=2276β2297 |doi=10.1002/jcsm.13043 |pmid=35961635 |pmc=9530508 }}</ref> Reorganization of motor maps within the cortex are not altered in either strength or endurance training. However, within the motor cortex, endurance induces [[angiogenesis]] within as little as three weeks to increase blood flow to the involved regions.<ref name = "Adkins" /> In addition, neurotropic factors within the motor cortex are [[upregulated]] in response to endurance training to promote neural survival.<ref name = "Adkins" /> Skilled motor tasks have been divided into two distinct phases: a fast-learning phase, in which an optimal plan for performance is established, and a slow-learning phase, in which longer-term structural modifications are made on specific motor modules.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Karni | first1 = Avi | last2 = Meyer | first2 = Gundela | year = 1998 | title = The acquisition of skilled motor performance: Fast and slow experience-driven changes in primary motor cortex | journal = Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences | volume = 95| issue = 3| pages = 861β868 | doi=10.1073/pnas.95.3.861| pmid = 9448252 | pmc = 33809| bibcode = 1998PNAS...95..861K| doi-access = free }}</ref> Even a small amount of training may be enough to induce neural processes that continue to evolve even after the training has stopped, which provides a potential basis for consolidation of the task. In addition, studying mice while they are learning a new complex reaching task, has found that "motor learning leads to rapid formation of [[dendritic spines]] (spinogenesis) in the [[motor cortex]] contralateral to the reaching forelimb".<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Xu | first1 = Tonghui | last2 = Perlik | first2 = Andrew J | year = 2009 | title = Rapid formation and selective stabilisation of synapses for enduring motor memories | journal = Nature | volume = 462| issue = 7275| pages = 915β20 | doi=10.1038/nature08389 | pmid=19946267 | pmc=2844762| bibcode = 2009Natur.462..915X}}</ref> However, motor cortex reorganization itself does not occur at a uniform rate across training periods. It has been suggested that the synaptogenesis and motor map reorganization merely represent the consolidation, and not the acquisition itself, of a specific motor task.<ref>{{cite journal | last1 = Kleim Jerrery | first1 = L. | last2 = Hogg Theresa | first2 = M. | year = 2004 | title = Cortical Synaptogenesis and Motor Map Reorganization Occur during Late, But not Early, Phase of Motor Skill Learning | journal = The Journal of Neuroscience | volume = 24 | issue = 3| pages = 629β633 | doi=10.1523/jneurosci.3440-03.2004 | pmid=14736848| pmc = 6729261 | citeseerx = 10.1.1.320.2189 }}</ref> Furthermore, the degree of plasticity in various locations (namely motor cortex versus spinal cord) is dependent on the behavioural demands and nature of the task (i.e., skilled reaching versus strength training).<ref name = "Adkins" /> Whether strength or endurance related, it is plausible that the majority of motor movements would require a skilled moving task of some form, whether it be maintaining proper form when paddling a canoe, sitting with a neutral posture, or bench pressing a heavier weight.{{citation needed|date=July 2022}} Endurance training assists the formation of these new neural representations within the motor cortex by up regulating neurotropic factors that could enhance the survival of the newer neural maps formed due to the skilled movement training.<ref name = "Adkins" /> Strength training results are seen in the spinal cord well before any physiological muscular adaptation is established through muscle hypertrophy or atrophy.<ref name = "Adkins" /> The results of endurance and strength training, and skilled reaching, therefore, combine to help each other maximize performance output. More recently, research has suggested that epigenetics may play a distinct role in orchestrating a muscle memory phenomenon <ref>{{cite journal|last1=Sharples|first1=Adam P.|last2=Stewart|first2=Claire E.|last3=Seaborne|first3=Robert A.|title=Does skeletal muscle have an 'epi'-memory? The role of epigenetics in nutritional programming, metabolic disease, aging and exercise|journal=Aging Cell|date=1 August 2016|volume=15|issue=4|pages=603β616|doi=10.1111/acel.12486|pmid=27102569|pmc=4933662|language=en|issn=1474-9726}}</ref> Indeed, previously untrained human participants experienced a chronic period of resistance exercise training (7 weeks) that evoked significant increases in skeletal muscle mass of the vastus lateralis muscle, in the quadriceps muscle group. Following a similar period of physical in-activity (7 weeks), where strength and muscle mass returned to baseline, participants performed a secondary period of resistance exercise.<ref name = "seaborne">{{cite journal|last1=Seaborne|first1=Robert A.|last2=Strauss|first2=Juliette|last3=Cocks|first3=Matthew|last4=Shepherd|first4=Sam|last5=OβBrien|first5=Thomas D.|last6=Someren|first6=Ken A. van|last7=Bell|first7=Phillip G.|last8=Murgatroyd|first8=Christopher|last9=Morton|first9=James P.|last10=Stewart|first10=Claire E.|last11=Sharples|first11=Adam P.|title=Human Skeletal Muscle Possesses an Epigenetic Memory of Hypertrophy|journal=Scientific Reports|date=30 January 2018|volume=8|issue=1|pages=1898|doi=10.1038/s41598-018-20287-3|pmid=29382913|pmc=5789890|language=En|issn=2045-2322|bibcode=2018NatSR...8.1898S}}</ref> Importantly, these participants adapted in an enhanced manner, whereby the amount of skeletal muscle mass gained was greater in the second period of muscle growth than the first, suggesting a muscle memory concept. The researchers went on to examine the human epigenome in order to understand how DNA methylation may aid in creating this effect. During the first period of resistance exercise, the authors identify significant adaptations in the human methylome, whereby over 9,000 CpG sites were reported as being significantly hypomethylated, with these adaptations being sustained during the subsequent period of physical in-activity. However, upon secondary exposure to resistance exercise, a greater frequency of hypomethylated CpG sites was observed, where over 18,000 sites reported as being significantly hypomethylated. The authors went on to identify how these changes altered the expression of relevant transcripts, and subsequently correlated these changes with adaptations in skeletal muscle mass. Collectively, the authors conclude that skeletal muscle mass and muscle memory phenomenon is, at least in part, modulated due to changes in DNA methylation.<ref name = "seaborne" /> Further work is now needed to confirm and explore these findings.
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