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Functional and architectural complexity within and between muscles: regional variation and intermuscular force transmission

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2011

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The Royal Society
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Higham, T. E., and A. A. Biewener. 2011. “Functional and Architectural Complexity Within and Between Muscles: Regional Variation and Intermuscular Force Transmission.” Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences 366 (1570) (April 18): 1477–1487. doi:10.1098/rstb.2010.0359.

Abstract

Over the past 30 years, studies of single muscles have revealed complex patterns of regional variation in muscle architecture, activation, strain and force. In addition, muscles are often functionally integrated with other muscles in parallel or in series. Understanding the extent of this complexity and the interactions between muscles will profoundly influence how we think of muscles in relation to organismal function, and will allow us to address questions regarding the functional benefits (or lack thereof) and dynamics of this complexity under in vivo conditions. This paper has two main objectives. First, we present a cohesive and integrative review of regional variation in function within muscles, and discuss the functional ramifications that can stem from this variation. This involves splitting regional variation into passive and active components. Second, we assess the functional integration of muscles between different limb segments by presenting new data involving in vivo measurements of activation and strain from the medial gastrocnemius, iliotibialis cranialis and iliotibialis lateralis pars preacetabularis of the helmeted guinea fowl (Numida meleagris) during level running on a motorized treadmill. Future research directions for both of these objectives are presented.

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guinea fowl, heterogeneity, locomotion, running, muscle mechanics, muscle architecture

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