4.5 Review

The influence of longitudinal muscle fascicle growth on mechanical function

期刊

JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSIOLOGY
卷 133, 期 1, 页码 87-103

出版社

AMER PHYSIOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1152/japplphysiol.00114.2022

关键词

force-length relationship; force-velocity relationship; passive properties; sarcomerogenesis; serial sarcomere number

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This review outlines the current knowledge on the influence of longitudinal muscle fascicle growth on mechanical function and highlights the need for further research to address methodological limitations. The existing literature suggests that longitudinal muscle fascicle growth can increase optimal muscle length and force, but there is limited understanding of the overall force-length relationship and torque-angle relationship. Future studies should also investigate the effects of longitudinal fascicle growth on passive tension and joint range of motion.
Skeletal muscle has the remarkable ability to remodel and adapt, such as the increase in serial sarcomere number (SSN) or fascicle length (FL) observed after overstretching a muscle. This type of remodeling is termed longitudinal muscle fascicle growth, and its impact on biomechanical function has been of interest since the 1960s due to its clinical applications in muscle strain injury, muscle spasticity, and sarcopenia. Despite simplified hypotheses on how longitudinal muscle fascicle growth might influence mechanical function, existing literature presents conflicting results partly due to a breadth of methodologies. The purpose of this review is to outline what is currently known about the influence of longitudinal muscle fascicle growth on mechanical function and suggest future directions to address current knowledge gaps and methodological limitations. Various interventions indicate longitudinal muscle fascicle growth can increase the optimal muscle length for active force, but whether the whole force-length relationship widens has been less investigated. Future research should also explore the ability for longitudinal fascicle growth to broaden the torque-angle relationship???s plateau region, and the relation to increased force during shortening. Without a concurrent increase in intramuscular collagen, longitudinal muscle fascicle growth also reduces passive tension at long muscle lengths; further research is required to understand whether this translates to increased joint range of motion. Finally, some evidence suggests longitudinal fascicle growth can increase maximum shortening velocity and peak isotonic power; however, there has yet to be direct assessment of these measures in a neurologically intact model of longitudinal muscle fascicle growth.

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