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Human in vivo medial gastrocnemius gear during active and passive muscle lengthening: Effect of inconsistent methods and nomenclature on data interpretation.

Matheus Daros PintoKazunori NosakaJames WakelingAnthony John Blazevich
Published in: Biology open (2023)
'Muscle gear' is calculated as the ratio of fascicle-to-muscle length change, strain, or velocity. Inconsistencies in nomenclature and definitions of gear exist across disciplines partly due to differences in fascicle (curved [Lf] vs. linear [Lf,straight]) and muscle (whole-muscle belly [Lb] vs. belly segment [Lb,segment]) length calculation methods. We tested whether these differences affect gear magnitude during passive and active muscle lengthening of human medial gastrocnemius of young men (n=13, 26.3±5.0 y) using an isokinetic dynameter. Lb, Lb,segment, Lf and Lf,straight were measured from motion analysis and ultrasound imaging data. Downshifts in belly gear but not belly segment gear occurred with muscle lengthening only during active lengthening. Muscle gear was unaffected by fascicle length measurement method (P=0.18) but differed when calculated as changes in Lb or Lb,segment (P<0.01) in a length-dependent manner. Caution is therefore advised for the use and interpretation of different muscle gear calculation methods and nomenclatures in animal and human comparative physiology.
Keyphrases
  • skeletal muscle
  • endothelial cells
  • electronic health record
  • big data
  • deep learning