Effect of altering starting length and activation timing of muscle on fiber strain and muscle damage.

TitleEffect of altering starting length and activation timing of muscle on fiber strain and muscle damage.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2006
AuthorsButterfield TA, Herzog W
JournalJ Appl Physiol (1985)
Volume100
Issue5
Pagination1489-98
Date Published2006 May
ISSN8750-7587
KeywordsAnimals, Biomechanical Phenomena, Electric Stimulation, Female, Isometric Contraction, Joints, Muscle Contraction, Muscle Fibers, Skeletal, Muscle, Skeletal, Neuromuscular Junction, Physical Conditioning, Animal, Rabbits, Sprains and Strains, Tarsal Joints, Tendons, Time Factors, Torque
Abstract

Muscle strain injuries are some of the most frequent injuries in sports and command a great deal of attention in an effort to understand their etiology. These injuries may be the culmination of a series of subcellular events accumulated through repetitive lengthening (eccentric) contractions during exercise, and they may be influenced by a variety of variables including fiber strain magnitude, peak joint torque, and starting muscle length. To assess the influence of these variables on muscle injury magnitude in vivo, we measured fiber dynamics and joint torque production during repeated stretch-shortening cycles in the rabbit tibialis anterior muscle, at short and long muscle lengths, while varying the timing of activation before muscle stretch. We found that a muscle subjected to repeated stretch-shortening cycles of constant muscle-tendon unit excursion exhibits significantly different joint torque and fiber strains when the timing of activation or starting muscle length is changed. In particular, measures of fiber strain and muscle injury were significantly increased by altering activation timing and increasing the starting length of the muscle. However, we observed differential effects on peak joint torque during the cyclic stretch-shortening exercise, as increasing the starting length of the muscle did not increase torque production. We conclude that altering activation timing and muscle length before stretch may influence muscle injury by significantly increasing fiber strain magnitude and that fiber dynamics is a more important variable than muscle-tendon unit dynamics and torque production in influencing the magnitude of muscle injury.

DOI10.1152/japplphysiol.00524.2005
Alternate JournalJ. Appl. Physiol.
PubMed ID16397062