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Three-Dimensional Ankle Moments and Nonlinear Summation of Rat Triceps Surae Muscles

The Achilles tendon and epimuscular connective tissues mechanically link the triceps surae muscles. These pathways may cause joint moments exerted by each muscle individually not to sum linearly, both in magnitude and direction. The aims were (i) to assess effects of sagittal plane ankle angle (vari...

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Autores principales: Tijs, Chris, van Dieën, Jaap H., Baan, Guus C., Maas, Huub
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4216100/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25360524
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111595
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author Tijs, Chris
van Dieën, Jaap H.
Baan, Guus C.
Maas, Huub
author_facet Tijs, Chris
van Dieën, Jaap H.
Baan, Guus C.
Maas, Huub
author_sort Tijs, Chris
collection PubMed
description The Achilles tendon and epimuscular connective tissues mechanically link the triceps surae muscles. These pathways may cause joint moments exerted by each muscle individually not to sum linearly, both in magnitude and direction. The aims were (i) to assess effects of sagittal plane ankle angle (varied between 150° and 70°) on isometric ankle moments, in both magnitude and direction, exerted by active rat triceps surae muscles, (ii) to assess ankle moment summation between those muscles for a range of ankle angles and (iii) to assess effects of sagittal plane ankle angle and muscle activation on Achilles tendon length. At each ankle angle, soleus (SO) and gastrocnemius (GA) muscles were first excited separately to assess ankle-angle moment characteristics and subsequently both muscles were excited simultaneously to investigate moment summation. The magnitude of ankle moment exerted by SO and GA, the SO direction in the transverse and sagittal planes, and the GA direction in the transverse plane were significantly affected by ankle angle. SO moment direction in the frontal and sagittal planes were significantly different from that of GA. Nonlinear magnitude summation varied between 0.6±2.9% and −3.6±2.9%, while the nonlinear direction summation varied between 0.3±0.4° and −0.4±0.7° in the transverse plane, between 0.5±0.4° and 0.1±0.4° in the frontal plane, and between 3.0±7.9° and 0.3±2.3° in the sagittal plane. Changes in tendon length caused by SO contraction were significantly lower than those during contraction of GA and GA+SO simultaneously. Thus, moments exerted by GA and SO sum nonlinearly both in the magnitude and direction. The limited degree of nonlinear summation may be explained by different mechanisms acting in opposite directions.
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spelling pubmed-42161002014-11-05 Three-Dimensional Ankle Moments and Nonlinear Summation of Rat Triceps Surae Muscles Tijs, Chris van Dieën, Jaap H. Baan, Guus C. Maas, Huub PLoS One Research Article The Achilles tendon and epimuscular connective tissues mechanically link the triceps surae muscles. These pathways may cause joint moments exerted by each muscle individually not to sum linearly, both in magnitude and direction. The aims were (i) to assess effects of sagittal plane ankle angle (varied between 150° and 70°) on isometric ankle moments, in both magnitude and direction, exerted by active rat triceps surae muscles, (ii) to assess ankle moment summation between those muscles for a range of ankle angles and (iii) to assess effects of sagittal plane ankle angle and muscle activation on Achilles tendon length. At each ankle angle, soleus (SO) and gastrocnemius (GA) muscles were first excited separately to assess ankle-angle moment characteristics and subsequently both muscles were excited simultaneously to investigate moment summation. The magnitude of ankle moment exerted by SO and GA, the SO direction in the transverse and sagittal planes, and the GA direction in the transverse plane were significantly affected by ankle angle. SO moment direction in the frontal and sagittal planes were significantly different from that of GA. Nonlinear magnitude summation varied between 0.6±2.9% and −3.6±2.9%, while the nonlinear direction summation varied between 0.3±0.4° and −0.4±0.7° in the transverse plane, between 0.5±0.4° and 0.1±0.4° in the frontal plane, and between 3.0±7.9° and 0.3±2.3° in the sagittal plane. Changes in tendon length caused by SO contraction were significantly lower than those during contraction of GA and GA+SO simultaneously. Thus, moments exerted by GA and SO sum nonlinearly both in the magnitude and direction. The limited degree of nonlinear summation may be explained by different mechanisms acting in opposite directions. Public Library of Science 2014-10-31 /pmc/articles/PMC4216100/ /pubmed/25360524 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111595 Text en © 2014 Tijs et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Tijs, Chris
van Dieën, Jaap H.
Baan, Guus C.
Maas, Huub
Three-Dimensional Ankle Moments and Nonlinear Summation of Rat Triceps Surae Muscles
title Three-Dimensional Ankle Moments and Nonlinear Summation of Rat Triceps Surae Muscles
title_full Three-Dimensional Ankle Moments and Nonlinear Summation of Rat Triceps Surae Muscles
title_fullStr Three-Dimensional Ankle Moments and Nonlinear Summation of Rat Triceps Surae Muscles
title_full_unstemmed Three-Dimensional Ankle Moments and Nonlinear Summation of Rat Triceps Surae Muscles
title_short Three-Dimensional Ankle Moments and Nonlinear Summation of Rat Triceps Surae Muscles
title_sort three-dimensional ankle moments and nonlinear summation of rat triceps surae muscles
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4216100/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25360524
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0111595
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