“…In order to rule out any methodological bias, we chose to use experimental conditions i.e., muscle length, number of contractions, contraction duration, whole exercise duration (Aldayel et al, 2010a,b;Jubeau et al, 2008) and stimulated muscle (Mackey et al, 2008) as close as possible to those previously used in humans. Additionally, rat muscle function was originally assessed by a strictly non-invasive experimental setup (Giannesini et al, 2005) offering the possibility to get, under physiological conditions in vivo, information about muscle mechanical performance (i.e., maximal tetanic force), anatomy (i.e., muscle volume) and physiology (i.e., T 2 changes) in contracting muscle and to repeat these investigations several times in the same animal, thereby allowing the first multimodal follow-up study of muscle injury after NMESinduced isometric contractions in rats. We hypothesized that, under comparable experimental conditions and in the absence of species-related differences in the magnitude of muscle injury, NMES of rat gastrocnemius muscles should result in an increased CK activity and T 2 values and a decreased tetanic force as previously reported in humans (Aldayel et al, 2010a,b;Jubeau et al, 2008).…”