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1.
Ultrasonography was used to measure pennation angle and electromyography (EMG) to record muscle activity of the human tibialis anterior (TA), lateral gastrocnemius (LG), medial gastrocnemius (MG), and soleus (SOL) muscles during graded isometric ankle plantar and dorsiflexion contractions done on a Biodex dynamometer. Data from 8 male and 8 female subjects were collected in increments of approximately 25% of maximum voluntary contraction (MVC) ranging from rest to MVC. A significant positive linear relationship (p<0.05) between normalized EMG and pennation angle for all muscles was observed when subject specific pennation angles at rest and MVC were included in the analysis. These were included to account for gender differences and inter-subject variability in pennation angle. The coefficient of determination, R(2), ranged between 0.76 for the TA and 0.87 for the SOL. The EMG-pennation angle relationships have ramifications for use in EMG-driven models of muscle force. The regression equations can be used to characterize fiber pennation angle more accurately and to determine how it changes with contraction intensity, thus providing improved estimates of muscle force when using musculoskeletal models.  相似文献   

2.
Effects on force of changes of the position of extensor digitorum longus muscle (EDL) relative to surrounding tissues were investigated in rat. Connective tissue at the muscle bellies of tibialis anterior (TA), extensor hallucis longus (EHL) and EDL was left intact, to allow myofascial force transmission. The position of EDL muscle was altered, without changing EDL muscle-tendon complex length, and force exerted at proximal and distal tendons of EDL as well as summed force exerted at the distal tendons of TA and EHL muscles (TA+EHL) were measured. Proximal and distal EDL forces as well as distal TA+EHL force changed significantly on repositioning EDL muscle. These muscle position-force characteristics were assessed at two EDL lengths and two TA+EHL lengths. It was shown that changes of muscle force with length changes of a muscle is the result of the length changes per se, as well as of changes of relative position of parts of the muscle. It is concluded that in addition to length, muscle position relative to its surroundings co-determines isometric muscle force.  相似文献   

3.
Force transmission in rat anterior crural compartment, containing tibialis anterior (TA), extensor hallucis longus (EHL) and extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscles, was investigated. These muscles together with the muscles of the peroneal compartment were excited maximally. Force was measured at both proximal and distal tendons of EDL muscle as well as at the tied distal tendons of TA and EHL muscles (the TA + EHL complex). Effects of TA + EHL complex length and force on proximally and distally measured forces of EDL muscle kept at constant muscle-tendon complex length were assessed. Length changes of EDL muscle were imposed by movement of the proximal force transducer to different positions.Proximal EDL force was unequal to distal EDL force (active as well as passive) over a wide range of EDL muscle-tendon complex lengths. This is an indication that force is also transmitted out of EDL muscle via pathways other than the tendons (i.e. inter- and/or extramuscular myofascial force transmission). At constant low EDL length, distal lengthening of the TA + EHL complex increased proximal EDL force and decreased distal EDL force. At optimum EDL length, TA+EHL active force was linearly related to the difference between proximal and distal EDL active force. These results indicate intermuscular myofascial force transmission between EDL muscle and the TA + EHL complex. The most likely pathway for this transmission is via connections of the intact intermuscular connective tissue network. The length effects of the TA + EHL complex can be understood on the basis of changes in the configuration, and consequently the stiffness, of these connections. Damage to connective tissue of the compartment decreased the proximo-distal EDL force difference, which indicates the importance of an intact connective tissue network for force transmission from muscle fibers to bone.  相似文献   

4.
Ultrasonography was used to measure the pennation angle of the human tibialis anterior (TA), lateral gastrocnemius (LG), medial gastrocnemius (MG), and soleus (Sol). The right and left legs of 8 male and 8 female subjects were tested at rest and during maximum voluntary contraction (MVC). Joint angles were chosen to control muscle tendon lengths so that the muscles were near their optimal length within the length-tension relationship. No differences in pennation angle were detected between the right and left legs. Another consistent finding was that the pennation angle at MVC was significantly greater than at rest for all muscles tested. Optimal pennation angles for the TA, MG, and Sol were significantly greater for the men than for the women. Optimal pennation angles for the TA, LG, MG, and Sol for the male subjects were 14.3 degrees, 23.7 degrees, 34.6 degrees, and 40.1 degrees respectively, whereas values of 12.1 degrees, 16.3 degrees, 27.3 degrees, and 26.3 degrees were recorded for the female subjects. The results of this study suggest the following: (1) similar values for pennation angle can be used for the right and left TA, LG, MG, and Sol; (2) pennation angle is significantly greater at MVC than at rest for all muscles tested; and (3) sex-specific values for optimal pennation angle should be used when modeling the force-generating potential of the primary muscles responsible for ankle plantar and dorsiflexion.  相似文献   

5.
As a background for studies concerning the effects of training on the properties and fibre type composition of skeletal muscle, information is needed concerning the normal duration of muscle use per day. Data of this kind were collected from adult cats, using implanted electrodes for electromyographic recording from hindlimb muscles acting across the ankle joint: extensor digitorum longus (EDL), tibialis anterior (TA), peroneus longus (PL), lateral gastrocnemius (LG) and soleus (SOL). The accumulated duration of any recorded activity was expressed, for each electrode site, as a percentage of total sampling time ("duty time"). As measured intermittently across 24 h periods (4 min sampling per 30 min), these duty times were markedly and significantly different among the various muscles, averages varying from 1.9% for EDL up to 9.5% for posterior PL and 13.9% for SOL. The distribution of activity across the various muscles was markedly different between highly active periods (mid-day) and periods of rest (mid-night). The 24 h duty times were strongly and significantly correlated to duty times obtained for only mid-day activity but not to those for only mid-night activity. Following the end of the physiological measurements, the animals were sacrificed and the muscles were analyzed with regard to fibre type composition (histochemistry). There was a significant positive correlation between the 24 h duty time and the percentage of type I fibres ("slow"). In the Discussion, the present results from cats are briefly compared to previously published data for humans.  相似文献   

6.
Force transmission from muscle fibers via the connective tissue network (i.e., myofascial force transmission) is an important determinant of muscle function. This study investigates the role of myofascial pathways for force transmission from multitendoned extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscle within an intact anterior crural compartment. Effects of length changes exclusively of head III of rat EDL muscle (EDL III) on myofascial force transmission were assessed. EDL III was lengthened at the distal tendon. For different lengths of EDL III, isometric forces were measured at the distal tendon of EDL III, as well as at the proximal tendon of whole EDL and at the distal tendons of tibialis anterior and extensor hallucis longus (TA+EHL) muscles. Lengthening of EDL III caused high changes in force exerted at the distal tendon of EDL III (from 0 to 1.03 +/- 0.07 N). In contrast, only minor changes were found in force exerted at the proximal EDL tendon (from 2.37 +/- 0.09 to 2.53 +/- 0.10 N). Increasing the length of EDL III decreased TA+EHL force significantly (by 7%, i.e., from 5.62 +/- 0.27 to 5.22 +/- 0.32 N). These results show that force is transmitted between EDL III and adjacent tissues via myofascial pathways. Optimal force exerted at the distal tendon of EDL III (1.03 +/- 0.07 N) was more than twice the force expected on the basis of the physiological cross-sectional area of EDL III muscle fibers (0.42 N). Therefore, a substantial fraction of this force must originate from sources other than EDL III. It is concluded that myofascial pathways play an important role in force transmission from multitendoned muscles.  相似文献   

7.
Muscles within the anterior crural compartment (extensor digitorum longus, EDL; tibialis anterior, TA; and extensor hallucis longus, EHL) and within the peroneal compartment were excited simultaneously and maximally. All muscles were kept at constant length with the exception of EDL, for which muscle length was changed by moving its proximal tendon. Active and passive force was measured at proximal as well as distal EDL tendons and at the combined distal tendons of TA and EHL (TA+EHL). In the initial experimental condition, a difference (F(proximal) > F(distal)) in EDL force, amounting to 0-14% of proximal force, was confirmed for most EDL lengths. This is interpreted as a clear proof of extramuscular myofascial force transmission, as no significant EDL length effects could be shown on TA+EHL force. Repeated measurements were confirmed to cause marked changes of both proximal and distal length-force characteristics, such as a shift of the whole ascending limb of the active curve, including optimum length, to higher lengths without decreasing optimum force, and decreasing active force at low lengths (by approximately 57%). Repeated measurements also lowered proximal and distal EDL passive force (by up to 35%). The proximo-distal difference in passive as well as active EDL force was decreased, but persisted. At most lengths, this difference for active force amounted to a constant fraction (14%) of proximal force. TA+EHL force was not affected significantly. Subsequently, acute effects of experimental surgical alterations were studied: The first manipulation was full lateral fasciotomy of the anterior crural compartment that caused a further decrease in active force at the proximal EDL but not at the distal EDL tendon. Passive forces showed no further significant changes. The proximo-distal EDL active force difference decreased to 0-5% of proximal force. After fasciotomy, TA+EHL force increased by 30%. This was interpreted as evidence of increased intramuscular and decreased extramuscular myofascial force transmission. The second manipulation was full isolation of EDL from TA+EHL, but not from extramuscular connective tissues, which caused a further decrease of the EDL proximo-distal force differences, indicating a stiffening effect of the presence of TA+EHL on the extramuscular matrix. For EDL active force the difference was no longer significantly different from zero. In contrast, for EDL passive force the proximo-distal force difference persisted. It is concluded that extramuscular myofascial force transmission is an important feature of the anterior crural compartment. The magnitude of this force transmission requires that it be considered in analysis of muscular function.  相似文献   

8.
Recent experiments to characterize the short-range stiffness (SRS)–force relationship in several cat hindlimb muscles suggested that the there are differences in the tendon elastic moduli across muscles [Cui, L., Perreault, E.J., Maas, H., Sandercock, T.G., 2008. Modeling short-range stiffness of feline lower hindlimb muscles. J. Biomech. 41 (9), 1945–1952.]. Those conclusions were inferred from whole muscle experiments and a computational model of SRS. The present study sought to directly measure tendon elasticity, the material property most relevant to SRS, during physiological loading to confirm the previous modeling results. Measurements were made from the medial gastrocnemius (MG), tibialis anterior (TA) and extensor digitorum longus (EDL) muscles during loading. For the latter, the model indicated a substantially different elastic modulus than for MG and TA. For each muscle, the stress–strain relationship of the external tendon was measured in situ during the loading phase of isometric contractions conducted at optimum length. Young's moduli were assessed at equal strain levels (1%, 2% and 3%), as well as at peak strain. The stress–strain relationship was significantly different between EDL and MG/TA, but not between MG and TA. EDL had a more apparent toe region (i.e., lower Young's modulus at 1% strain), followed by a more rapid increase in the slope of the stress–strain curve (i.e., higher Young's modulus at 2% and 3% strain). Young's modulus at peak strain also was significantly higher in EDL compared to MG/TA, whereas no significant difference was found between MG and TA. These results indicate that during natural loading, tendon Young's moduli can vary considerably across muscles. This creates challenges to estimating muscle behavior in biomechanical models for which direct measures of tendon properties are not available.  相似文献   

9.
Estimation of instantaneous moment arms of lower-leg muscles   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Muscle moment arms at the human knee and ankle were estimated from muscle length changes measured as a function of joint flexion angle in cadaver specimens. Nearly all lower-leg muscles were studied: extensor digitorum longus, extensor hallucis longus, flexor digitorum longus, flexor hallucis longus, gastrocnemius lateralis, gastrocnemius medialis, peroneus brevis, peroneus longus, peroneus tertius, plantaris, soleus, tibialis anterior, and tibialis posterior. Noise in measured muscle length was filtered by means of quintic splines. Moment arms of the mm. gastrocnemii appear to be much more dependent on joint flexion angles than was generally assumed by other investigators. Some consequences for earlier analyses are mentioned.  相似文献   

10.
11.
To examine the muscle synergies of multi-directional postural control, we calculated the target-directed variance fraction (η) and net action direction of each muscle using the electromyogram-weighted averaging (EWA) method. Subjects stood barefoot on a force platform and maintained their posture by producing a center of pressure (COP) in twelve target directions. Surface electromyograms were recorded from 6 right-sided muscles: tibialis anterior (TA), soleus (SOL), lateral gastrocnemius (LG), medial gastrocnemius (MG), fibularis longus (FL), and gluteus medius (GM). η was calculated from COP with duration of 20-s, during which the COP was relatively constant. The EWA method was applied to the EMG and the two COP components to estimate the net action direction of each muscle. The results showed that η values in all directions did not cross the 0.8 threshold. This suggests that human postural control is achieved by synergistic co-activation. The EWA revealed that the net action directions of TA, SOL, LG, MG, and GM were 277.6°, 71.1°, 87.7°, 94.0°, and 2.2°, respectively. This suggests that postural maintenance by muscle synergy can be attributed to the relevant muscles having various action directions. These results demonstrate that muscle synergies can be investigated using COP fluctuations.  相似文献   

12.
Equal proximal and distal lengthening of rat extensor digitorum longus (EDL) were studied. Tibialis anterior, extensor hallucis longus, and EDL were active maximally. The connective tissues around these muscle bellies were left intact. Proximal EDL forces differed from distal forces, indicating myofascial force transmission to structures other than the tendons. Higher EDL distal force was exerted (ratio approximately 118%) after distal than after equal proximal lengthening. For proximal force, the reverse occurred (ratio approximately 157%). Passive EDL force exerted at the lengthened end was 7-10 times the force exerted at the nonlengthened end. While kept at constant length, synergists (tibialis anterior + extensor hallucis longus: active muscle force difference approximately -10%) significantly decreased in force by distal EDL lengthening, but not by proximal EDL lengthening. We conclude that force exerted at the tendon at the lengthened end of a muscle is higher because of the extra load imposed by myofascial force transmission on parts of the muscle belly. This is mediated by changes of the relative position of most parts of the lengthened muscle with respect to neighboring muscles and to compartment connective tissues. As a consequence, muscle relative position is a major codeterminant of muscle force for muscle with connectivity of its belly close to in vivo conditions.  相似文献   

13.
The muscles of the triceps surae group are important for performance in most sports and in the performance of activities of daily life. In addition, hypertrophy and balance among these muscles are integral to success in bodybuilding. The purpose of this study was to compare the muscle utilization patterns of the 2 major muscles of the triceps surae group, the soleus (SOL) and gastrocnemius (lateral head = LG and medial head = MG), and the tibialis anterior (TA) as an antagonist muscle to the group. Their electromyographic (EMG) signals were compared during 50 constant external resistance contractions at a level established before the testing session. Eleven experienced subjects contributed data during plantar flexion at 3 different knee angles (90, 135, and 180 degrees ). Both root mean square amplitude and integrated signal analyses of the EMGs revealed that the MG produced significantly greater activity than either the SOL or TA at 180 degrees, whereas the LG was not different from the SOL at any knee angle measured. Data also revealed that the SOL produced less electrical activity at 180 degrees than at the other knee angles, whereas the MG produced greater electrical activity. As would be expected, the TA produced lower EMG values than any of the triceps surae muscles at all angles tested. These data indicate that selective targeting of the SOL and MG is possible through the manipulation of knee angle. This targeting appears to be controlled by the biarticular and monoarticular structures of the MG and SOL, respectively. The LG appears less affected by knee position than the MG. Results suggest that the SOL can be targeted most effectively with the knee flexed at 90 degrees and the MG with the leg fully extended. The LG appears to also be more active at 180 degrees; however, it is not as affected as the MG or SOL by knee angle.  相似文献   

14.
Structures contributing to force transmission in muscle are reviewed combining some historical and relatively recently published experimental data. Also, effects of aponeurotomy and tenotomy are reviewed shortly as well as some new experimental results regarding these interventions that reinforce the concept of myofascial force transmission. The review is also illustrated by some new images of single muscle fibres from Xenopus Laevis indicative of such transmission and some data about locations of insertion of human gluteus maximus muscle. From this review and the new material, emerges a line of thought indicating that mechanical connections between muscle fibres and intramuscular connective tissue play an important role in force transmission. New experimental observations are presented for non-spanning muscle (i.c., rat biceps femoris muscle), regarding the great variety of types of intramuscular connections that exist i n addition to myo-tendinous junctions at the perimuscular ends of muscle fibres. Such connections are classified as (1) tapered end connections, (2) Myo-myonal junctions, (3) myo-epimysial junctions and (3) Myo-endomysial junctions. This line of thought is followed up by consideration of a possible role of connections of intra- and extramuscular connective tissue in force transmission out of the muscle. Experimental results of an explorative nature, regarding the interactions of extensor digitorum longus (EDL), tibialis anterior (TA) and hallucis longus (HAL) muscles within a relatively intact dorsal flexor compartment of the rat hind leg, indicate that: (1) length force properties of EDL are influenced by TA activity in a length dependent fashion. Depending on TA length, force exerted by EDL, kept at constant origin insertion distance, is variable and the effect is influenced by EDL length itself as well; (2) Force is transmitted from muscle to extramuscular connective tissue and vice versa. As a consequence force exerted at proximal and distal tendons of a muscle are not always equal. The difference being transmitted by extramuscular connective tissue and may appear at the tendons of other muscles or may be transmitted via connective tissue directly to bone. It is concluded that the system of force transmission from skeletal muscle should be considered as a multiple system.  相似文献   

15.
Epimuscular myofascial force transmission (EMFT) is a major determinant of muscle force exerted, as well as length range of force exertion. Therefore, EMFT is of importance in remedial surgery performed, e.g., in spastic paresis. We aimed to test the following hypotheses: (1) muscle lengthening surgery (involving preparatory dissection (PD) and subsequent proximal aponeurotomy (AT)) affects the target muscle force exerted at its distal and proximal tendons differentially, (2) forces of non-operated synergistic muscles are affected as well, (3) PD causes some of these effects.In three conditions (control, post-PD, and post-AT exclusively on m. extensor digitorum longus (EDL)), forces exerted by rat anterior crural muscles were measured simultaneously. Our results confirm hypotheses (1–2), and hypothesis (3) in part: Reduction of EDL maximal force differed by location (i.e. 26.3% when tested distally and 44.5% when tested proximally). EDL length range of active force exertion increased only distally. Force reductions were shown also for non-operated tibialis anterior (by 11.9%), as well as for extensor hallucis longus (by 8.4%) muscles. In tibialis anterior only, part of the force reduction (4.9%) is attributable to PD. Due to EMFT, remedial surgery should be considered to have differential effects for targeted and non-targeted synergistic muscles.  相似文献   

16.
Effects of lengthening of the whole group of anterior crural muscles (tibialis anterior and extensor hallucis longus muscles (TA + EHL) and extensor digitorum longus (EDL)) on myofascial interaction between synergistic EDL and TA + EHL muscles, and on myofascial force transmission between anterior crural and antagonistic peroneal muscles, were investigated. All muscles were either passive or maximally active. Peroneal muscles were kept at a constant muscle tendon complex length. Either EDL or all anterior crural muscles were lengthened so that effects of lengthening of TA + EHL could be analyzed. For both lengthening conditions, a significant difference in proximally and distally measured EDL passive and active forces, indicative of epimuscular myofascial force transmission, was present. However, added lengthening of TA + EHL significantly affected the magnitude of the active and passive load exerted on EDL. For the active condition, the direction of the epimuscular load on EDL was affected; at all muscle lengths a proximally directed load was exerted on EDL, which decreased at higher muscle lengths. Lengthening of anterior crural muscles caused a 26% decrease in peroneal active force.

Extramuscular myofascial connections are thought to be the major contributor to the EDL proximo-distal active force difference. For antagonistic peroneal complex, the added distal lengthening of a synergistic muscle increases the effects of extramuscular myofascial force transmission.  相似文献   


17.
A large inter-individual variation is seen in muscle fascicle length of the athletes but the reasons for this phenomenon are unclear. The purpose of this study was to determine whether genetic factors contribute to the variances in muscle architectural characteristics. Nine monozygous twin pairs (3 males and 6 females), mean age 23 years (range 17-40) were studied. Fascicle length, pennation angle, and muscle thickness of the medial (MG) and lateral (LG) gastrocnemius muscles were measured in vivo by B-mode ultrasound. In the LG muscle intrapair resemblance (P < 0.01) for fascicle length (r = 0.98), pennation angle (r = 0.94) and muscle thickness (r = 0.86) were observed. In MG muscle, however, there was no intrapair resemblance for fascicle length (r = 0.66, P > 0.05), although pennation angle (r = 0.73, P < 0.05) and muscle thickness (r = 0.86, P < 0.01) were significant. Mean percent intrapair difference in LG and MG muscles were 1.8% and 5.1% for fascicle length, 11.3% and 12.3% for pennation angle and 12.4% and 9.9% for muscle thickness, respectively. There is intrapair difference between muscle thickness and pennation angle in both MG (r = 0.69, P < 0.05) and LG (r = 0.70, P < 0.05) muscles. However, no significant correlation was observed for intrapair difference between muscle thickness and fascicle length in both muscles (MG, r = 0.46; LG, r = 0.40). It appears that genetic predisposition is the predominant factor for the determination of muscle fascicle length. However, a lack of intrapair resemblance in MG fascicle length raises the possibility that fascicle length may be further influenced by external environmental factors such as physical training.  相似文献   

18.
The effects of inter- and extramuscular myofascial force transmission on muscle length force characteristics were studied in rat. Connective tissues at the bellies of the experimental synergistic muscles of the anterior crural compartment were left intact. Extensor digitorium longus (EDL) muscle was lengthened distally whereas tibialis anterior (TA) and extensor hallucis longus (EHL) were kept at constant muscle–tendon complex length. Substantial differences were found in EDL force measured at the proximal and distal tendons (maximally 46% of the proximal force). EDL with intact inter- as well as extramuscular connections had an increased length range between active slack and optimum length compared to EDL with extramuscular connections exclusively: optimum muscle length was shifted by more than 2 mm. Distal EDL lengthening caused the distal force exerted by TA+EHL complex to decrease (approximately 17% of the initial force). This indicates increased intermuscular myofascial force transmission from TA+EHL muscle complex to EDL muscle.

Finite-element modeling showed that: (1) Inter- and extramuscular myofascial force transmission leads to a substantial distribution of the lengths of the sarcomeres arranged in series within muscle fibers. Distribution of stress within the muscle fibers showed that the muscle fiber cannot be considered as a unit exerting equal forces at both ends. (2) Increased heterogeneity of mean fiber sarcomere lengths (i.e., a “parallel” distribution of length of sarcomeres among different muscle fibers) is found, particularly at high muscle lengths. This also explains the shift in muscle optimum length to higher lengths.

It is concluded that inter- and extramuscular myofascial force transmission has substantial effects on muscle length–force characteristics.  相似文献   


19.
Muscles within the anterior tibial compartment (extensor digitorum longus: EDL, tibialis anterior: TA, and extensor hallucis longus muscles: EHL) and within the peroneal compartment were excited simultaneously and maximally. The ankle joint was fixed kept at 90 degrees. For EDL length force characteristics were determined. This was performed first with the anterior tibial compartment intact (1), and subsequently after: (2) blunt dissection of the anterior and lateral interface of EDL and TA. (3) Full longitudinal lateral fasciotomy of the anterior tibial compartment. (4) Full removal of TA and EHL muscles. Length-force characteristics were changed significantly by these interventions. Blunt dissection caused a force decrease of approximately 10% at all lengths, i.e., without changing EDL optimum or active slack lengths. This indicates that intermuscular connective tissue mediates significant interactions between adjacent muscles. Indications of its relatively stiff mechanical properties were found both in the physiological part of the present study, as well as the anatomical survey of connective tissue. Full lateral compartmental fasciotomy increased optimum length and decreased active slack length, leading to an increase of length range (by approximately 47%), while decreasing optimal force. As a consequence an increase in force for the lower length range was found. Such changes of length force characteristics are compatible with an increased distribution of fiber mean sarcomere length. On the basis of these results, it is concluded that extramuscular connective tissue has a sufficiently stiff connection to intramuscular connective tissue to be able to play a role in force transmission. Therefore, in addition to intramuscular myofascial force transmission, extramuscular force transmission has to be considered within intact compartments of limbs. A survey of connective tissue structures within the compartment indicated sheet-like neuro-vascular tracts to be major components of extramuscular connective tissue with connections to intramuscular connective tissue stroma. Removal of TA and EHL yielded yet another decrease of force (mean for optimal force approximately 10%). No significant changes of optimum and active slack lengths could be shown in this case. It is concluded that myofascial force transmission should be taken into account when considering muscular function and its coordination, and in clinical decisions regarding fasciotomy and repetitive strain injury.  相似文献   

20.
An a priori model of the whole active muscle length-tension relationship was constructed utilizing only myofilament length and serial sarcomere number for rabbit tibialis anterior (TA), extensor digitorum longus (EDL), and extensor digitorum II (EDII) muscles. Passive tension was modeled with a two-element Hill-type model. Experimental length-tension relations were then measured for each of these muscles and compared to predictions. The model was able to accurately capture the active-tension characteristics of experimentally-measured data for all muscles (ICC=0.88 ± 0.03). Despite their varied architecture, no differences in predicted versus experimental correlations were observed among muscles. In addition, the model demonstrated that excursion, quantified by full-width-at-half-maximum (FWHM) of the active length-tension relationship, scaled linearly (slope=0.68) with normalized muscle fiber length. Experimental and theoretical FWHM values agreed well with an intraclass correlation coefficient of 0.99 (p<0.001). In contrast to active tension, the passive tension model deviated from experimentally-measured values and thus, was not an accurate predictor of passive tension (ICC=0.70 ± 0.07). These data demonstrate that modeling muscle as a scaled sarcomere provides accurate active functional but not passive functional predictions for rabbit TA, EDL, and EDII muscles and call into question the need for more complex modeling assumptions often proposed.  相似文献   

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