Abstract

Aponeuroses are connective tissues found on the surface of pennate muscles and are in close association with muscle fascicles. In addition to transmitting muscle forces to the external tendon, aponeurosis has been hypothesized to influence the direction of muscle shape change during a contraction. Muscle shape changes affect muscle contractile force and velocity because they influence the gear ratio with which muscle fascicles transmit force and velocity to the tendon. If aponeurosis modulates muscle shape changes, altering the aponeurosis' radial integrity with incisions should alter gearing. We tested the hypothesis that incising the aponeurosis would lead to decreased gearing across force conditions with an in situ preparation of the turkey lateral gastrocnemius muscle. We found that multiple full-length incisions in the aponeurosis altered the relationship between gearing and force relative to the intact aponeurosis condition. Specifically, after multiple aponeurosis incisions, gear ratio decreased by 19% in the high-force contractions compared with the intact condition. These results suggest that aponeuroses influence muscle shape change and can alter muscle contractile force and speed through their effect on muscle gearing. NEW & NOTEWORTHY Muscle gearing is determined by muscle shape change during a contraction and varies with the force of contraction. Variable gearing influences muscle force and speed, but how gearing is modulated is not well understood. Incising the aponeurosis before and after contractions demonstrates that aponeurosis plays a role in modulating gearing.

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