• Title of article

    Effects of inter- and extramuscular myofascial force transmission on adjacent synergistic muscles: assessment by experiments and finite-element modeling

  • Author/Authors

    Can A. Yucesoy، نويسنده , , Bart H. F. J. M. Koopman، نويسنده , , Guus C. Baan، نويسنده , , Henk J. Grootenboer، نويسنده , , Peter A. Huijing، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
  • Pages
    15
  • From page
    1797
  • To page
    1811
  • Abstract
    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.
  • Keywords
    finite-element method , Inter- and extramuscular myofascial force transmission , Length–force characteristics , Distribution of sarcomerelengths , Rat extensor digitorium longus (EDL) muscle
  • Journal title
    Journal of Biomechanics
  • Serial Year
    2003
  • Journal title
    Journal of Biomechanics
  • Record number

    451656