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首页> 外文期刊>The Journal of Experimental Biology >Hindlimb muscle function in relation to speed and gait: In vivo patternsof strain and activation in a hip and knee extensor of the rat (Rattusnorvegicus)
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Hindlimb muscle function in relation to speed and gait: In vivo patternsof strain and activation in a hip and knee extensor of the rat (Rattusnorvegicus)

机译:与速度和步态有关的后肢肌肉功能:大鼠臀部和膝盖伸肌(Rattus Norvegicus)的体内应变和激活模式

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Understanding how animals actually use their muscles during locomotion is an important goal in the fields of locomotor physiology and biomechanics. Active muscles in vivo can shorten, lengthen or remain isometric, and their mechanical performance depends on the relative magnitude and timing of these patterns of fascicle strain and activation. It has recently been suggested that terrestrial animals may conserve metabolic energy during locomotion by minimizing limb extensor muscle strain during stance, when the muscle is active, facilitating more economical force generation and elastic energy recovery from limb muscle-tendon units. However, whereas the ankle extensors of running turkeys and hopping wallabies have been shown to generate force with little length change (<6 % strain), similar muscles in cats appear to change length more substantially while active. Because previous work has tended to focus on the mechanical behavior of ankle extensors during animal movements, the actions of more proximal limb muscles are less well understood. To explore further the hypothesis of force economy and isometric behavior of limb muscles during terrestrial locomotion, we measured patterns of electromyographic (EMG) activity and fascicle strain (using sonomicrometry) in two of the largest muscles of the rat hindlimb, the biceps femoris (a hip extensor) and vastus lateralis (a knee extensor) during walking, trotting and galloping. Our results show that the biceps and vastus exhibit largely overlapping bursts of electrical activity during the stance phase of each step cycle in all gaits. During walking and trotting, this activity typically commences shortly before the hindlimb touches the ground, but during galloping the onset of activity depends on whether the limb is trailing (first limb down) or leading (second limb down), particularly in the vastus. In the trailing limb, the timing of the onset of vastus activity is slightly earlier than that observed during walking and trotting, but in the leading limb, this activity begins much later, well after the foot makes ground contact (mean 7 % of the step cycle). In both muscles, EMG activity typically ceases approximately two-thirds of the way through the stance phase. While electrically active during stance, biceps fascicles shorten, although the extent of shortening differs significantly among gaits (P<0.01). Total average fascicle shortening strain in the biceps is greater during walking (23+/-3 %) and trotting (27+/-5 %) than during galloping (12+/-5 % and 19+/-6 % in the trailing and leading limbs, respectively). In contrast, vastus fascicles typically lengthen (by 8-16 %, depending on gait) over the first half of stance, when the muscle is electrically active, before shortening slightly or remaining nearly isometric over much of the second half of stance. Interestingly, in the leading limb during galloping, vastus fascicles lengthen prior to muscle activation and exhibit substantial shortening (10+/-2 %) during the period when EMG activity is recorded. Thus, patterns of muscle activation and/or muscle strain differ among gaits, between muscles and even within the same muscle of contralateral hindlimbs (as during galloping). In contrast to the minimal strain predicted by the force economy hypothesis, our results suggest that proximal limb muscles in rats operate over substantial length ranges during stance over various speeds and gaits and exhibit complex and changing activation and strain regimes, exemplifying the variable mechanical roles that muscles can play, even during level, steady-speed locomotion.
机译:了解运动过程中动物如何实际使用肌肉是运动生理学和生物力学领域的重要目标。体内活跃的肌肉可以缩短,延长或保持等轴测,其机械性能取决于这些束应力和激活模式的相对大小和时间。最近有人提出,陆运动物在运动时,可以通过在姿势活跃时使肢体伸肌的张力减至最小来节省运动能量,从而使肌肉活动,从而更经济地产生力并从肢体肌腱单元中恢复弹性能量。然而,尽管已证明奔跑的火鸡和跳鼠的踝关节伸肌产生的力几乎没有长度变化(<6%应变),但猫的相似肌肉在活跃时似乎长度变化更大。由于先前的研究倾向于集中在动物运动过程中踝部伸肌的机械行为,因此对近端四肢肌肉的作用了解得很少。为了进一步探索陆上运动过程中肢体肌肉的力量经济和等距行为的假说,我们在大鼠后肢的两个最大肌肉股二头肌(a股二头肌)中测量了肌电图(EMG)活性和束张力(使用体测法)的模式。步行,小跑和舞动时,髋关节伸肌和股外侧肌(膝盖伸肌)。我们的结果表明,在所有步态的每个步骤周期的站立阶段中,二头肌和股骨头都表现出很大程度的重叠电活动爆发。在步行和小跑期间,此活动通常在后肢接触地面之前不久开始,但是在疾驰期间,活动的开始取决于肢体是尾随(第一条肢体向下)还是前肢(第二条肢体向下),特别是在大腿上。在后肢中,大腿活动开始的时间比步行和小跑时观察到的要早一些,但是在前肢中,这种活动开始的时间要晚得多,在足部与地面接触后很久(平均踏步的7%)周期)。在两种肌肉中,肌电活动通常在站立阶段的大约三分之二时停止。尽管在站立期间电活动,但二头肌束缩短,尽管步态之间的缩短程度差异显着(P <0.01)。二头肌的平均平均分束缩短应变在行走(23 +/- 3%)和小跑(27 +/- 5%)时比在疾驰期间(12 +/- 5%和19 +/- 6%)大和前肢。相反,当肌肉处于电活动状态时,在姿势的前半部分,股前束通常会伸长(增长8-16%,具体取决于步态),然后在姿势的后半部分中略微缩短或保持等距。有趣的是,在奔腾过程中,在前肢中,股前束在肌肉激活之前会伸长,并且在记录肌电图活动的过程中表现出明显的缩短(10 +/- 2%)。因此,步态之间,肌肉之间甚至对侧后肢的同一肌肉内(如疾驰期间),肌肉激活和/或肌肉拉紧的模式也不同。与通过力经济假说预测的最小应变相反,我们的结果表明,大鼠近端肢体肌肉在各种速度和步态的站立姿势期间都在相当长的长度范围内运作,并表现出复杂且变化的激活和应变方式,这说明了可变的机械作用即使在水平运动中,肌肉也可以运动。

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