Abstract

The existence of an anterior cruciate ligament-hamstring reflex arc, the extent to which these reflexes can protect the knee, and the extent to which they are affected by rupture of the anterior cruciate ligament remain controversial. We evaluated the temporal components of the anterior cruciate ligament-hamstring synergy by simulating an injury to the ligament in a goat model. Reflexive hamstring activation in anesthetized goats was evaluated when the anterior cruciate ligament was loaded with static subfailure, dynamic subfailure, and dynamic failure loads. Reflexive hamstring activation was not found in response to static subfailure loading but was observed in response to dynamic subfailure and failure loading. The latency of the reflex evoked by dynamic failure loading was shorter than that evoked by dynamic subfailure loading. The findings suggest that the extent to which the hamstring reflexes can protect the knee may be bounded by the ability of these muscles to generate force rapidly and the amplitude and time-course of the loads applied to the knee joint. The present data present a framework for further investigation of the contribution of anterior cruciate ligament-hamstring reflexes to the stability of the knee joint under high loads and loading rates.

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