CHANGES IN PENNATION WITH JOINT ANGLE AND MUSCLE TORQUE - IN-VIVO MEASUREMENTS IN HUMAN BRACHIALIS MUSCLE

被引:124
|
作者
HERBERT, RD
GANDEVIA, SC
机构
[1] UNIV NEW S WALES,PRINCE WALES MED RES INST,SYDNEY,NSW,AUSTRALIA
[2] UNIV SYDNEY,FAC HLTH SCI,SYDNEY,NSW,AUSTRALIA
来源
JOURNAL OF PHYSIOLOGY-LONDON | 1995年 / 484卷 / 02期
关键词
D O I
10.1113/jphysiol.1995.sp020683
中图分类号
Q189 [神经科学];
学科分类号
071006 ;
摘要
1. Estimates of pennation in human muscles are usually obtained from cadavers. In this study, pennation of human brachialis was measured in, vivo using sonography. Effects of static and dynamic changes in elbow angle and torque were investigated. 2. Pennation was measured in eight subjects using an 80 mm, 5 MHz, linear-array ultrasound transducer to generate sagittal images of the brachialis during maximal and submaximal isometric contractions at various elbow angles. It was shown that estimates of pennation were reproducible, representative of measurements made throughout the belly of the muscle and not distorted by compression of the muscle with the transducer or rotation of the muscle out of the plane of the transducer. 3. Mean resting pennation was 9.0 +/- 2.0 deg (S.D., range 6.5-12.9 deg). When the muscle was relaxed there was no effect of elbow angle on pennation. However, during a maximal isometric contraction (MVC), with the elbow flexed to 90 deg, pennation increased nonlinearly with elbow torque to between 22 and 30 deg (mean 24.7 +/- 2.4 deg). The effect of increasing torque was small when the elbow was fully extended. The relationship between elbow angle, elbow torque and brachialis pennation suggests that the relaxed brachialis muscle is slack over much of its physiological range of lengths. 4. There was no hysteresis in the relationship between torque and pennation during slow isometric contractions (0.2 MVC s(-1)), and the relationship between elbow angle and pennation was similar during slow shortening and lengthening contractions. 5. Two consequences follow from these findings. Firstly, intramuscular mechanics are complex and simple planar models of muscles underestimate the increases in pennation which occur during muscle contraction. Second, spindle afferents from relaxed muscles may not encode joint angle over the full range of movement.
引用
收藏
页码:523 / 532
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] In vivo measurement of fascicle length and pennation angle of the human biceps femoris muscle
    Chleboun, GS
    France, AR
    Crill, MT
    Braddock, HK
    Howell, JN
    CELLS TISSUES ORGANS, 2001, 169 (04) : 401 - 409
  • [2] Predictability of in vivo changes in pennation angle of human tibialis anterior muscle from rest to maximum isometric dorsiflexion
    Constantinos N. Maganaris
    Vasilios Baltzopoulos
    European Journal of Applied Physiology and Occupational Physiology, 1999, 79 : 294 - 297
  • [3] Predictability of in vivo changes in pennation angle of human tibialis anterior muscle from rest to maximum isometric dorsiflexion
    Maganaris, CN
    Baltzopoulos, V
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY AND OCCUPATIONAL PHYSIOLOGY, 1999, 79 (03) : 294 - 297
  • [4] Short communication: Pennation angle variability in human muscle
    Infantolino, Benjamin W., 1600, Human Kinetics Publishers Inc. (30):
  • [5] Short Communication: Pennation Angle Variability in Human Muscle
    Infantolino, Benjamin W.
    Challis, John H.
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED BIOMECHANICS, 2014, 30 (05) : 663 - 667
  • [6] In vivo measurement of fascicle length and pennation of the human anconeus muscle at several elbow joint angles
    Stevens, Daniel E.
    Smith, Cameron B.
    Harwood, Brad
    Rice, Charles L.
    JOURNAL OF ANATOMY, 2014, 225 (05) : 502 - 509
  • [7] Determination of fascicle length and pennation in a contracting human muscle in vivo
    Fukunaga, T
    Ichinose, Y
    Ito, M
    Kawakami, Y
    Fukashiro, S
    JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY, 1997, 82 (01) : 354 - 358
  • [8] In-vivo muscle length-force-joint angle relationship for quasi-static muscle action of the biceps muscle
    Hossain, Zakir M.
    Pluta, M.
    Grill, W.
    HEALTH MONITORING OF STRUCTURAL AND BIOLOGICAL SYSTEMS 2013, 2013, 8695
  • [9] Pennation Angle Changes, Muscle Architecture, and Whole Body Vibration Training
    Crossley, Kent
    Feland, J. Brent
    Johnson, A. Wayne
    Eggett, Dennis
    MEDICINE AND SCIENCE IN SPORTS AND EXERCISE, 2012, 44 : 915 - 915
  • [10] Association between ultrasound measurements of muscle thickness, pennation angle, echogenicity and skeletal muscle strength in the elderly
    Strasser, Eva Maria
    Draskovits, Thomas
    Praschak, Markus
    Quittan, Michael
    Graf, Alexandra
    AGE, 2013, 35 (06) : 2377 - 2388