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Passive Mechanical Properties of Human Medial Gastrocnemius and Soleus Musculotendinous Unit

The in vivo characterization of the passive mechanical properties of the human triceps surae musculotendinous unit is important for gaining a deeper understanding of the interactive responses of the tendon and muscle tissues to loading during passive stretching. This study sought to quantify a compr...

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Autores principales: Wang, Ruoli, Yan, Shiyang, Schlippe, Marius, Tarassova, Olga, Pennati, Gaia Valentina, Lindberg, Frida, Körting, Clara, Destro, Antea, Yang, Luming, Shi, Bin, Arndt, Anton
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Hindawi 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7889354/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33628828
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/8899699
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author Wang, Ruoli
Yan, Shiyang
Schlippe, Marius
Tarassova, Olga
Pennati, Gaia Valentina
Lindberg, Frida
Körting, Clara
Destro, Antea
Yang, Luming
Shi, Bin
Arndt, Anton
author_facet Wang, Ruoli
Yan, Shiyang
Schlippe, Marius
Tarassova, Olga
Pennati, Gaia Valentina
Lindberg, Frida
Körting, Clara
Destro, Antea
Yang, Luming
Shi, Bin
Arndt, Anton
author_sort Wang, Ruoli
collection PubMed
description The in vivo characterization of the passive mechanical properties of the human triceps surae musculotendinous unit is important for gaining a deeper understanding of the interactive responses of the tendon and muscle tissues to loading during passive stretching. This study sought to quantify a comprehensive set of passive muscle-tendon properties such as slack length, stiffness, and the stress-strain relationship using a combination of ultrasound imaging and a three-dimensional motion capture system in healthy adults. By measuring tendon length, the cross-section areas of the Achilles tendon subcompartments (i.e., medial gastrocnemius and soleus aspects), and the ankle torque simultaneously, the mechanical properties of each individual compartment can be specifically identified. We found that the medial gastrocnemius (GM) and soleus (SOL) aspects of the Achilles tendon have similar mechanical properties in terms of slack angle (GM: −10.96° ± 3.48°; SOL: −8.50° ± 4.03°), moment arm at 0° of ankle angle (GM: 30.35 ± 6.42 mm; SOL: 31.39 ± 6.42 mm), and stiffness (GM: 23.18 ± 13.46 Nmm(−1); SOL: 31.57 ± 13.26 Nmm(−1)). However, maximal tendon stress in the GM was significantly less than that in SOL (GM: 2.96 ± 1.50 MPa; SOL: 4.90 ± 1.88 MPa, p = 0.024), largely due to the higher passive force observed in the soleus compartment (GM: 99.89 ± 39.50 N; SOL: 174.59 ± 79.54 N, p = 0.020). Moreover, the tendon contributed to more than half of the total muscle-tendon unit lengthening during the passive stretch. This unequal passive stress between the medial gastrocnemius and the soleus tendon might contribute to the asymmetrical loading and deformation of the Achilles tendon during motion reported in the literature. Such information is relevant to understanding the Achilles tendon function and loading profile in pathological populations in the future.
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spelling pubmed-78893542021-02-23 Passive Mechanical Properties of Human Medial Gastrocnemius and Soleus Musculotendinous Unit Wang, Ruoli Yan, Shiyang Schlippe, Marius Tarassova, Olga Pennati, Gaia Valentina Lindberg, Frida Körting, Clara Destro, Antea Yang, Luming Shi, Bin Arndt, Anton Biomed Res Int Research Article The in vivo characterization of the passive mechanical properties of the human triceps surae musculotendinous unit is important for gaining a deeper understanding of the interactive responses of the tendon and muscle tissues to loading during passive stretching. This study sought to quantify a comprehensive set of passive muscle-tendon properties such as slack length, stiffness, and the stress-strain relationship using a combination of ultrasound imaging and a three-dimensional motion capture system in healthy adults. By measuring tendon length, the cross-section areas of the Achilles tendon subcompartments (i.e., medial gastrocnemius and soleus aspects), and the ankle torque simultaneously, the mechanical properties of each individual compartment can be specifically identified. We found that the medial gastrocnemius (GM) and soleus (SOL) aspects of the Achilles tendon have similar mechanical properties in terms of slack angle (GM: −10.96° ± 3.48°; SOL: −8.50° ± 4.03°), moment arm at 0° of ankle angle (GM: 30.35 ± 6.42 mm; SOL: 31.39 ± 6.42 mm), and stiffness (GM: 23.18 ± 13.46 Nmm(−1); SOL: 31.57 ± 13.26 Nmm(−1)). However, maximal tendon stress in the GM was significantly less than that in SOL (GM: 2.96 ± 1.50 MPa; SOL: 4.90 ± 1.88 MPa, p = 0.024), largely due to the higher passive force observed in the soleus compartment (GM: 99.89 ± 39.50 N; SOL: 174.59 ± 79.54 N, p = 0.020). Moreover, the tendon contributed to more than half of the total muscle-tendon unit lengthening during the passive stretch. This unequal passive stress between the medial gastrocnemius and the soleus tendon might contribute to the asymmetrical loading and deformation of the Achilles tendon during motion reported in the literature. Such information is relevant to understanding the Achilles tendon function and loading profile in pathological populations in the future. Hindawi 2021-02-09 /pmc/articles/PMC7889354/ /pubmed/33628828 http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/8899699 Text en Copyright © 2021 Ruoli Wang et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wang, Ruoli
Yan, Shiyang
Schlippe, Marius
Tarassova, Olga
Pennati, Gaia Valentina
Lindberg, Frida
Körting, Clara
Destro, Antea
Yang, Luming
Shi, Bin
Arndt, Anton
Passive Mechanical Properties of Human Medial Gastrocnemius and Soleus Musculotendinous Unit
title Passive Mechanical Properties of Human Medial Gastrocnemius and Soleus Musculotendinous Unit
title_full Passive Mechanical Properties of Human Medial Gastrocnemius and Soleus Musculotendinous Unit
title_fullStr Passive Mechanical Properties of Human Medial Gastrocnemius and Soleus Musculotendinous Unit
title_full_unstemmed Passive Mechanical Properties of Human Medial Gastrocnemius and Soleus Musculotendinous Unit
title_short Passive Mechanical Properties of Human Medial Gastrocnemius and Soleus Musculotendinous Unit
title_sort passive mechanical properties of human medial gastrocnemius and soleus musculotendinous unit
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7889354/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33628828
http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/8899699
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