Abstract

If we accept Sherrington's view that a muscle may undergo changes in length without concomitant changes in tension as a means of preserving a certain posture or attitude of the body, we find that the rectus abdominis of the cat manifests this property in a high degree. The animals used for experiment were etherized and a tracheal cannula inserted. The skin was incised in the median line of the thorax. The pectoral muscles of one side were then severed close to their attachments to the sternum and sternal portions of the ribs and reflected outward. The tendinous insertions of the rectus abdominis on the ribs were divided and the free upper end lifted out. A thread was tied about the tendinous end of the muscle and led through a system of small pulleys to a muscle lever. The abdominal wall was kept intact. A rise of the writing point of the lever indicated a shortening of the muscle, while the writing point fell when the muscle relaxed. The thoracic and abdominal respiratory movements were recorded by Verdin tambours connected to Crile stethographs. Small changes in the length of the rectus abdominis occurred during ordinary respiration. But if fluid, usually an M/8 solution of sodium chloride, was introduced into the stomach through a stomach tube passed down the esophagus, or directly into the peritoneal cavity through a hypodermic needle, the muscle promptly relaxed, the amount of relaxation being proportional to the amount of fluid introduced, and continuing until the limit of distension of the abdominal cavity was reached. This limit of distension is determined by the muscular wall and not by the skin. The relaxation occurs when fluid flows in at pressures of only two or three centimeters of salt solution, and a contraction occurs when fluid is flowing out of the stomach.

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