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Changes in shear wave propagation within skeletal muscle during active and passive force generation
Affiliation:2. Department of Internal Medicine II, Eberhard-Karls-University, Tübingen, Germany;3. Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Russell H. Morgan Department of Radiology and Radiological Science, Baltimore, Maryland, USA;4. Victor Babes University Timișoara, Department V Internal Medicine, Timișoara, Romania;1. Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA;2. Department of Physical Therapy and Human Movement Sciences, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, USA;3. Department of Physiology, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, USA;4. Department of Biomedical Engineering, Northwestern University, Chicago, IL, USA
Abstract:Muscle force can be generated actively through changes in neural excitation, and passively through externally imposed changes in muscle length. Disease and injury can disrupt force generation, but it can be challenging to separate passive from active contributions to these changes. Ultrasound elastography is a promising tool for characterizing the mechanical properties of muscles and the forces that they generate. Most prior work using ultrasound elastography in muscle has focused on the group velocity of shear waves, which increases with increasing muscle force. Few studies have quantified the phase velocity, which depends on the viscoelastic properties of muscle. Since passive and active forces within muscle involve different structures for force transmission, we hypothesized that measures of phase velocity could detect changes in shear wave propagation during active and passive conditions that cannot be detected when considering only group velocity. We measured phase and group velocity in the human biceps brachii during active and passive force generation and quantified the differences in estimates of shear elasticity obtained from each of these measurements. We found that measures of group velocity consistently overestimate the shear elasticity of muscle. We used a Voigt model to characterize the phase velocity and found that the estimated time constant for the Voigt model provided a way to distinguish between passive and active force generation. Our results demonstrate that shear wave elastography can be used to distinguish between passive and active force generation when it is used to characterize the phase velocity of shear waves propagating in muscle.
Keywords:Shear wave elastography  Muscle  Forces  Viscoelastic
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