SUMMARY1. Muscle fibre composition and capillarity were evaluated in frozen sections stained for myosin ATPase of the soleus and the white area of the medial head of the gastrocnemius of rats made hyperthyroid by injections of triiodothyronine (300-400 ,ug/kg body weight, every other day) for 2, 3 and 4 weeks.2. 02 consumption of homogenates of these muscles in the presence of excess inorganic phosphate (Pi) and ADP with pyruvate and malate as substrates was also measured. 3. Increased oxidative capacity was observed in the soleus homogenates of hyperthyroid animals after 2 weeks of treatment while no changes were observed in the oxidative capacity of the homogenates of the white area of the medial head of the gastrocnemius, even after 4 weeks of treatment.4. Hyperthyroid animals showed a greater capillarity than controls in both muscles. In the soleus this was evident after 2 weeks of treatment while in the white area of the medial head of the gastrocnemius, it was evident only after 4 weeks of treatment.5. Fibre composition was affected in the soleus after 4 weeks of treatment. In control animals two fibre types were present in the soleus: slow-twitch oxidative fibres (s.o. or type I fibres) with a high ATPase activity after acid pre-incubation and fast-twitch glycolytic oxidative fibres (f.o.g. or type IIa fibres) with a low ATPase activity after acid pre-incubation. In the soleus of the hyperthyroid animals, a third fibre type with intermediate ATPase activity after acid pre-incubation was also present. This most probably represents a change in the type of myosin being synthesized by some fibres. No changes in fibre composition were observed in the white area of medial head ofthe gastrocnemius which was made up of only fast-twitch glycolytic fibres (f.g. or type IIb fibres).6. The changes in oxidative capacity and capillarity in the soleus preceded and did not seem to be related to the changes in the type of myosin being synthesized.7. The increased capillarity found in the white area of the medial head of the gastrocnemius of the hyperthyroid animals, in the absence of an increase in the * To whom reprint requests should be addressed.
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