Publication | Open Access
Iron deficiency in the rat. Physiological and biochemical studies of muscle dysfunction.
308
Citations
21
References
1976
Year
Muscle FunctionIron MetabolismIron DeficiencyMuscle DysfunctionOxidative StressAnemiaMetabolic SyndromeMuscle PhysiologyKinesiologyMuscle InjurySkeletal MuscleExerciseIron DextranApplied PhysiologyBiochemical StudiesMetabolic StateMineral MetabolismHealth SciencesAnimal PhysiologyBiochemistryNeuromuscular PhysiologyEnergy MetabolismPhysiologyExercise PhysiologyWork PerformanceMetabolismMedicine
Work performance on a treadmill has been evaluated in normal and iron-deficient rats. Anemia was removed as a variable by adjusting the hemoglobin of all animals to the same concentration. At a hemoglobin compatible with normal work performance, iron-deficient animals showed a marked impairment of running ability as compared to control animals. Iron therapy corrected the disability within 4 days. Concentrations of the cytochrome pigments and myoglobin, and rates of oxidative phosphorylation with pyruvate-malate, succinate, and alpha-glycerophosphate as substrates were all reduced in mitochondrial preparations from skeletal muscle of iron-deficient rats, but only the rate of phosphorylation with alpha-glycerophosphate as substrate increased significantly and in parallel with the recovery in work performance of the iron-deficient rats treated with iron dextran.
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