Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, University of California San Diego and VA Medical Center, San Diego, CA 92093-0863, USA.
J Anat. 2010 Sep;217(3):196-202. doi: 10.1111/j.1469-7580.2010.01271.x. Epub 2010 Jul 14.
The abdominal wall is a composite of muscles that are important for the mechanical stability of the spine and pelvis. Tremendous clinical attention is given to these muscles, yet little is known about how they function in isolation or how they interact with one another. Given the morphological, vascular, and innervation complexities associated with these muscles and their proximity to the internal organs, an appropriate animal model is important for understanding their physiological and mechanical significance during function. To determine the extent to which the rat abdominal wall resembles that of human, 10 adult male Sprague-Dawley rats were killed and formalin-fixed for architectural and morphological analyses of the four abdominal wall muscles (rectus abdominis, external oblique, internal oblique, and transversus abdominis). Physiological cross-sectional areas and optimal fascicle lengths demonstrated a pattern that was similar to human abdominal wall muscles. In addition, sarcomere lengths measured in the neutral spine posture were similar to human in their relation to optimal sarcomere length. These data indicate that the force-generating and length change capabilities of these muscles, relative to one another, are similar in rat and human. Finally, the fiber lines of action of each abdominal muscle were similar to human over most of the abdominal wall. The main exception was in the lower abdominal region (inferior to the pelvic crest), where the external oblique becomes aponeurotic in human but continues as muscle fibers into its pelvic insertion in the rat. We conclude that, based on the morphology and architecture of the abdominal wall muscles, the adult male Sprague-Dawley rat is a good candidate for a model representation of human, particularly in the middle and upper abdominal wall regions.
腹壁是由肌肉组成的,这些肌肉对于脊柱和骨盆的机械稳定性非常重要。人们对这些肌肉给予了极大的临床关注,但对于它们如何单独发挥作用,以及它们如何相互作用知之甚少。考虑到这些肌肉与内部器官的形态、血管和神经支配的复杂性,以及它们之间的接近程度,一个合适的动物模型对于理解它们在功能期间的生理和机械意义非常重要。为了确定大鼠腹壁在多大程度上与人类相似,10 只成年雄性 Sprague-Dawley 大鼠被处死并固定在福尔马林溶液中,用于对腹壁的四块肌肉(腹直肌、腹外斜肌、腹内斜肌和腹横肌)进行结构和形态分析。生理横截面积和最佳肌束长度显示出与人类腹壁肌肉相似的模式。此外,在中立脊柱姿势下测量的肌节长度与人类最佳肌节长度的关系相似。这些数据表明,相对于彼此,这些肌肉的产生力和长度变化能力在大鼠和人类中是相似的。最后,每条腹肌的纤维作用线在大部分腹壁上与人类相似。主要的例外是在腹部的下部区域(骨盆嵴以下),在人类中,腹外斜肌变得腱膜化,但在大鼠中,它仍然是肌肉纤维进入骨盆插入处。我们得出结论,基于腹壁肌肉的形态和结构,成年雄性 Sprague-Dawley 大鼠是人类模型的一个很好的候选者,特别是在中腹部和上腹部区域。