European Journal of Applied Physiology | 2021
Regulation of muscle potassium: exercise performance, fatigue and health implications
Abstract
This review integrates from the single muscle fibre to exercising human the current understanding of the role of skeletal muscle for whole-body potassium (K + ) regulation, and specifically the regulation of skeletal muscle [K + ]. We describe the K + transport proteins in skeletal muscle and how they contribute to, or modulate, K + disturbances during exercise. Muscle and plasma K + balance are markedly altered during and after high-intensity dynamic exercise (including sports), static contractions and ischaemia, which have implications for skeletal and cardiac muscle contractile performance. Moderate elevations of plasma and interstitial [K + ] during exercise have beneficial effects on multiple physiological systems. Severe reductions of the trans-sarcolemmal K + gradient likely contributes to muscle and whole-body fatigue, i.e. impaired exercise performance. Chronic or acute changes of arterial plasma [K + ] (hyperkalaemia or hypokalaemia) have dangerous health implications for cardiac function. The current mechanisms to explain how raised extracellular [K + ] impairs cardiac and skeletal muscle function are discussed, along with the latest cell physiology research explaining how calcium, β-adrenergic agonists, insulin or glucose act as clinical treatments for hyperkalaemia to protect the heart and skeletal muscle in vivo. Finally, whether these agents can also modulate K + -induced muscle fatigue are evaluated.