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How to Confuse Motor Control: Passive Muscle Shortening after Contraction in Lengthened Position Reduces the Muscular Holding Stability in the Sense of Adaptive Force

SIMPLE SUMMARY: During everyday activities and sports, muscles must continuously stabilize the body. In particular, to change direction or to decelerate in motion requires well-dosed muscular resistance. Accordingly, muscle length and tension need to be adjusted. Complex control processes of the ner...

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Autores principales: Bittmann, Frank N., Dech, Silas, Schaefer, Laura V.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10143964/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37109439
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life13040911
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author Bittmann, Frank N.
Dech, Silas
Schaefer, Laura V.
author_facet Bittmann, Frank N.
Dech, Silas
Schaefer, Laura V.
author_sort Bittmann, Frank N.
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: During everyday activities and sports, muscles must continuously stabilize the body. In particular, to change direction or to decelerate in motion requires well-dosed muscular resistance. Accordingly, muscle length and tension need to be adjusted. Complex control processes of the nerve–muscle system are demanded. To hold a limb stable under the load of varying forces, the muscle-controlling system has to organize matching resistance. It was previously shown that the holding capacity is sensitive to interfering inputs such as unpleasant odors or imagery. We investigated if different preconditioning regarding contraction and length changes of elbow flexors (n = 19 limbs) influence the maximal holding capacity and maximal Adaptive Force. Muscles were manually tested using a handheld device (recording force and limb position). A passive shortening of the muscle after it was contracted in the lengthened position caused a breakdown of the holding capacity by ~47%. The maximal Adaptive Force was not affected. A second precontraction in the test position erased the reducing effect. This passive shortening is assumed to lead to a slack of muscle spindles (receptor for muscle length). This presumably causes inappropriate length information and irritates muscle length and tension control in the short term. The results reflect the functional characteristics of the muscular holding capacity in contrast to other strengths. ABSTRACT: Adaptation to external forces relies on a well-functioning proprioceptive system including muscle spindle afferents. Muscle length and tension control in reaction to external forces is most important regarding the Adaptive Force (AF). This study investigated the effect of different procedures, which are assumed to influence the function of muscle spindles, on the AF. Elbow flexors of 12 healthy participants (n = 19 limbs) were assessed by an objectified manual muscle test (MMT) with different procedures: regular MMT, MMT after precontraction (self-estimated 20% MVIC) in lengthened position with passive return to test position (CL), and MMT after CL with a second precontraction in test position (CL-CT). During regular MMTs, muscles maintained their length up to 99.7% ± 1.0% of the maximal AF (AF(max)). After CL, muscles started to lengthen at 53.0% ± 22.5% of AF(max). For CL-CT, muscles were again able to maintain the static position up to 98.3% ± 5.5% of AF(max). AFiso(max) differed highly significantly between CL vs. CL-CT and regular MMT. CL was assumed to generate a slack of muscle spindles, which led to a substantial reduction of the holding capacity. This was immediately erased by a precontraction in the test position. The results substantiate that muscle spindle sensitivity seems to play an important role for neuromuscular functioning and musculoskeletal stability.
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spelling pubmed-101439642023-04-29 How to Confuse Motor Control: Passive Muscle Shortening after Contraction in Lengthened Position Reduces the Muscular Holding Stability in the Sense of Adaptive Force Bittmann, Frank N. Dech, Silas Schaefer, Laura V. Life (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: During everyday activities and sports, muscles must continuously stabilize the body. In particular, to change direction or to decelerate in motion requires well-dosed muscular resistance. Accordingly, muscle length and tension need to be adjusted. Complex control processes of the nerve–muscle system are demanded. To hold a limb stable under the load of varying forces, the muscle-controlling system has to organize matching resistance. It was previously shown that the holding capacity is sensitive to interfering inputs such as unpleasant odors or imagery. We investigated if different preconditioning regarding contraction and length changes of elbow flexors (n = 19 limbs) influence the maximal holding capacity and maximal Adaptive Force. Muscles were manually tested using a handheld device (recording force and limb position). A passive shortening of the muscle after it was contracted in the lengthened position caused a breakdown of the holding capacity by ~47%. The maximal Adaptive Force was not affected. A second precontraction in the test position erased the reducing effect. This passive shortening is assumed to lead to a slack of muscle spindles (receptor for muscle length). This presumably causes inappropriate length information and irritates muscle length and tension control in the short term. The results reflect the functional characteristics of the muscular holding capacity in contrast to other strengths. ABSTRACT: Adaptation to external forces relies on a well-functioning proprioceptive system including muscle spindle afferents. Muscle length and tension control in reaction to external forces is most important regarding the Adaptive Force (AF). This study investigated the effect of different procedures, which are assumed to influence the function of muscle spindles, on the AF. Elbow flexors of 12 healthy participants (n = 19 limbs) were assessed by an objectified manual muscle test (MMT) with different procedures: regular MMT, MMT after precontraction (self-estimated 20% MVIC) in lengthened position with passive return to test position (CL), and MMT after CL with a second precontraction in test position (CL-CT). During regular MMTs, muscles maintained their length up to 99.7% ± 1.0% of the maximal AF (AF(max)). After CL, muscles started to lengthen at 53.0% ± 22.5% of AF(max). For CL-CT, muscles were again able to maintain the static position up to 98.3% ± 5.5% of AF(max). AFiso(max) differed highly significantly between CL vs. CL-CT and regular MMT. CL was assumed to generate a slack of muscle spindles, which led to a substantial reduction of the holding capacity. This was immediately erased by a precontraction in the test position. The results substantiate that muscle spindle sensitivity seems to play an important role for neuromuscular functioning and musculoskeletal stability. MDPI 2023-03-30 /pmc/articles/PMC10143964/ /pubmed/37109439 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life13040911 Text en © 2023 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Bittmann, Frank N.
Dech, Silas
Schaefer, Laura V.
How to Confuse Motor Control: Passive Muscle Shortening after Contraction in Lengthened Position Reduces the Muscular Holding Stability in the Sense of Adaptive Force
title How to Confuse Motor Control: Passive Muscle Shortening after Contraction in Lengthened Position Reduces the Muscular Holding Stability in the Sense of Adaptive Force
title_full How to Confuse Motor Control: Passive Muscle Shortening after Contraction in Lengthened Position Reduces the Muscular Holding Stability in the Sense of Adaptive Force
title_fullStr How to Confuse Motor Control: Passive Muscle Shortening after Contraction in Lengthened Position Reduces the Muscular Holding Stability in the Sense of Adaptive Force
title_full_unstemmed How to Confuse Motor Control: Passive Muscle Shortening after Contraction in Lengthened Position Reduces the Muscular Holding Stability in the Sense of Adaptive Force
title_short How to Confuse Motor Control: Passive Muscle Shortening after Contraction in Lengthened Position Reduces the Muscular Holding Stability in the Sense of Adaptive Force
title_sort how to confuse motor control: passive muscle shortening after contraction in lengthened position reduces the muscular holding stability in the sense of adaptive force
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10143964/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37109439
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/life13040911
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