论文标题
肌肉收缩的能量。 I.等距收缩期间的组织力和变形
The energy of muscle contraction. I. Tissue force and deformation during isometric contractions
论文作者
论文摘要
在收缩期间,由于ATP的水解能量,肌肉组织的能量增加。该能量分布在整个组织中,作为收缩元件中的应变能电位,来自基础材料组织的3D变形(含有细胞和ECM效应)的应变能电位,与肌肉几乎不可压缩的体积变化以及在肌肉表面所做的外部工作有关的能量。因此,能量在收缩时通过肌肉组织重新分布,只有该能量的成分用于进行机械工作,并在肌肉的行动线上发展力。了解如何通过肌肉组织重新分布应变能力将有助于启发为什么整个肌肉在其行动线中的机械性能与仅收缩元素所期望的性能不符。在这里,我们使用基于有限元方法的3D肌肉模型来证明这些物理效应。收缩肌肉内的组织变形很大,因此收缩力学的机制使用连续力学原理进行大变形。我们介绍了收缩内侧胃肌肌肉的模拟,显示了从基于MRI的图像观察到的组织变形。本文在等距收缩期间跟踪通过肌肉组织的应变能电位的重新分布,并显示肌肉组织应力和应变中的纤维缩短,跨角度,横向隆起和各向异性如何与肌肉材料特性与收缩元素的作用之间的相互作用有关。
During contraction the energy of muscle tissue increases due to energy from the hydrolysis of ATP. This energy is distributed across the tissue as strain-energy potentials in the contractile elements, strain-energy potential from the 3D deformation of the base-material tissue (containing cellular and ECM effects), energy related to changes in the muscle's nearly incompressible volume and external work done at the muscle surface. Thus, energy is redistributed through the muscle's tissue as it contracts, with only a component of this energy being used to do mechanical work and develop forces in the muscle's line-of-action. Understanding how the strain-energy potentials are redistributed through the muscle tissue will help enlighten why the mechanical performance of whole muscle in its line-of-action does not match the performance that would be expected from the contractile elements alone. Here we demonstrate these physical effects using a 3D muscle model based on the finite element method. The tissue deformations within contracting muscle are large, and so the mechanics of contraction were explained using the principles of continuum mechanics for large deformations. We present simulations of a contracting medial gastrocnemius muscle, showing tissue deformations that mirror observations from MRI-based images. This paper tracks the redistribution of strain-energy potentials through the muscle tissue during isometric contractions, and shows how fibre shortening, pennation angle, transverse bulging and anisotropy in the stress and strain of the muscle tissue are all related to the interaction between the material properties of the muscle and the action of the contractile elements.