Abstract

This study tested the hypothesis that the ratio of changes in muscle fascicle and tendon length that occurs with joint movement scales linearly with the ratio of the slack lengths of the muscle fascicles and tendons. We compared the contribution of muscle fascicles to passive muscle‐tendon lengthening in muscles with relatively short and long fascicles. Fifteen healthy adults participated in the study. The medial gastrocnemius, tibialis anterior, and brachialis muscle‐tendon units were passively lengthened by slowly rotating the ankle or elbow. Change in muscle fascicle length was measured with ultrasonography. Change in muscle‐tendon length was calculated from estimated muscle moment arms. Change in tendon length was calculated by subtracting change in fascicle length from change in muscle‐tendon length. The median (IQR) contribution of muscle fascicles to passive lengthening of the muscle‐tendon unit, measured as the ratio of the change in fascicle length to the change in muscle‐tendon unit length, was 0.39 (0.26–0.48) for the medial gastrocnemius, 0.51 (0.29–0.60) for tibialis anterior, and 0.65 (0.49–0.90) for brachialis. Brachialis muscle fascicles contributed to muscle‐tendon unit lengthening significantly more than medial gastrocnemius muscle fascicles, but less than would be expected if the fascicle contribution scaled linearly with the ratio of muscle fascicle and tendon slack lengths.

Highlights

  • When relaxed muscle-tendon units are passively lengthened, passive forces are generated in muscle fascicles and tendons

  • In the relaxed human gastrocnemius and tibialis anterior muscles, tendons contribute more than muscle fascicles to passive changes in muscle-tendon length (Herbert et al 2002)

  • The relationship between change in fascicle length and change in muscle-tendon length was linear over the observed range of fascicle lengths of the tibialis anterior and brachialis muscles (r = 0.98 for tibialis anterior and 0.90 for brachialis)

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Summary

Introduction

When relaxed muscle-tendon units are passively lengthened, passive forces are generated in muscle fascicles and tendons. The tendinous structures in series with the tibialis anterior contribute nearly half of the of the total change in tibialis anterior muscle-tendon length (Herbert et al 2002). Both the gastrocnemius and tibialis anterior have tendons that are much longer than their muscle fascicles

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