Carlson Kristian J
Department of Anatomical Sciences, School of Medicine, Health Sciences Center, Stony Brook University, Stony Brook, NY 11794-8081, USA.
Primates. 2006 Jul;47(3):218-29. doi: 10.1007/s10329-005-0166-4. Epub 2006 Jan 28.
Thorpe et al. (Am J Phys Anthropol 110:179-199, 1999) quantified chimpanzee (Pan troglodytes) muscle architecture and joint moment arms to determine whether they functionally compensated for structural differences between chimpanzees and humans. They observed enough distinction to conclude that musculoskeletal properties were not compensatory and suggested that chimpanzees and humans do not exhibit dynamically similar movements. These investigators based their assessment on unilateral limb musculatures from three male chimpanzees, of which they called one non-adult representative. Factors such as age, sex, and behavioral lateralization may be responsible for variation in chimpanzee muscle architecture, but this is presently unknown. While the full extent of variation in chimpanzee muscle architecture due to such factors cannot be evaluated with data presently available, the present study expands the chimpanzee dataset and provides a preliminary glimpse of the potential relevance of these factors. Thirty-seven forelimb and 36 hind limb muscles were assessed in two chimpanzee cadavers: one unilaterally (right limbs), and one bilaterally. Mass, fiber length, and physiological cross-sectional area (PCSA) are reported for individual muscles and muscle groups. The musculature of an adult female is more similar in architectural patterns to a young male chimpanzee than to humans, particularly when comparing muscle groups. Age- and sex-related intraspecific differences do not obscure chimpanzee-human interspecific differences. Side asymmetry in one chimpanzee, despite consistent forelimb directional asymmetry, also does not exceed the magnitude of chimpanzee-human differences. Left forelimb muscles, on average, usually had higher masses and longer fiber lengths than right, while right forelimb muscles, on average, usually had greater PCSAs than left. Most muscle groups from the left forelimb exhibited greater masses than right groups, but group asymmetry was significant only for the manual digital muscles. The hind limb exhibited less asymmetry than the forelimb in most comparisons. Examination of additional chimpanzees would clarify the full range of inter- and intra-individual variation.
索普等人(《美国体质人类学期刊》110:179 - 199, 1999)对黑猩猩(黑猩猩属)的肌肉结构和关节力臂进行了量化,以确定它们是否在功能上弥补了黑猩猩和人类之间的结构差异。他们观察到了足够的差异,得出肌肉骨骼特性并非具有补偿性的结论,并表明黑猩猩和人类的动态运动并不相似。这些研究人员基于三只雄性黑猩猩的单侧肢体肌肉组织进行评估,其中他们称有一只为非成年代表。年龄、性别和行为偏侧化等因素可能导致黑猩猩肌肉结构的差异,但目前尚不清楚。虽然由于这些因素导致的黑猩猩肌肉结构变化的全部程度无法用现有数据进行评估,但本研究扩大了黑猩猩数据集,并初步揭示了这些因素的潜在相关性。在两只黑猩猩尸体上评估了37块前肢肌肉和36块后肢肌肉:一只评估单侧(右肢),另一只评估双侧。报告了个体肌肉和肌肉群的质量、纤维长度和生理横截面积(PCSA)。成年雌性的肌肉结构模式与年轻雄性黑猩猩比与人类更为相似,特别是在比较肌肉群时。种内与年龄和性别相关的差异并没有掩盖黑猩猩与人类之间的种间差异。一只黑猩猩的侧不对称性,尽管前肢方向存在一致的不对称性,但也没有超过黑猩猩与人类差异的程度。平均而言,左前肢肌肉的质量通常比右前肢肌肉更高,纤维长度更长,而右前肢肌肉的平均PCSA通常比左前肢肌肉更大。左前肢的大多数肌肉群的质量比右肢的更大,但仅手动指肌的组不对称性显著。在大多数比较中,后肢的不对称性比前肢小。对更多黑猩猩的研究将阐明个体间和个体内变异的全部范围。