Department of Biological Science, North Carolina State University, 3546 Thomas Hall, 112 Derieux Place, Raleigh, NC, 27607, USA.
Department of Biological Sciences, Meredith College, 3800 Hillsborough St, Raleigh, NC, 27607, USA.
Sci Rep. 2021 Jan 22;11(1):2114. doi: 10.1038/s41598-021-81489-w.
Physiological cross-sectional area (PCSA), an important biomechanical variable, is an estimate of a muscle's contractile force potential and is derived from dividing muscle mass by the product of a muscle's average fascicle length and a theoretical constant representing the density of mammalian skeletal muscle. This density constant is usually taken from experimental studies of small samples of several model taxa using tissues collected predominantly from the lower limbs of adult animals. The generalized application of this constant to broader analyses of mammalian myology assumes that muscle density (1) is consistent across anatomical regions and (2) is unaffected by the aging process. To investigate the validity of these assumptions, we studied muscles of rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus) in the largest sample heretofore investigated explicitly for these variables, and we did so from numerous anatomical regions and from three different age-cohorts. Differences in muscle density and histology as a consequence of age and anatomical region were evaluated using Tukey's HSD tests. Overall, we observed that older individuals tend to have denser muscles than younger individuals. Our findings also demonstrated significant differences in muscle density between anatomic regions within the older cohorts, though none in the youngest cohort. Approximately 50% of the variation in muscle density can be explained histologically by the average muscle fiber area and the average percent fiber area. That is, muscles with larger average fiber areas and a higher proportion of fiber area tend to be denser. Importantly, using the age and region dependent measurements of muscle density that we provide may increase the accuracy of PCSA estimations. Although we found statistically significant differences related to ontogeny and anatomical region, if density cannot be measured directly, the specific values presented herein should be used to improve accuracy. If a single muscle density constant that has been better validated than the ones presented in the previous literature is preferred, then 1.0558 and 1.0502 g/cm would be reasonable constants to use across all adult and juvenile muscles respectively.
生理横截面积(PCSA)是一个重要的生物力学变量,它是肌肉收缩力潜力的估计值,是通过将肌肉质量除以肌肉平均肌束长度与代表哺乳动物骨骼肌密度的理论常数的乘积来计算的。这个密度常数通常是从小型模型动物的少数样本的实验研究中得出的,这些样本主要来自成年动物的下肢组织。将这个常数广泛应用于对哺乳动物肌学的更广泛分析,假设(1)肌肉密度在解剖区域内是一致的,(2)不受衰老过程的影响。为了研究这些假设的有效性,我们研究了兔子(Oryctolagus cuniculus)的肌肉,这是迄今为止在这些变量方面研究最广泛的样本,我们从许多解剖区域和三个不同的年龄队列进行了研究。使用 Tukey 的 HSD 检验评估了年龄和解剖区域差异对肌肉密度和组织学的影响。总的来说,我们观察到,年龄较大的个体的肌肉密度往往比年龄较小的个体更高。我们的研究结果还表明,在年龄较大的队列中,不同解剖区域的肌肉密度存在显著差异,但在年龄最小的队列中则没有。肌肉密度约 50%的变化可以用平均肌纤维面积和平均纤维面积百分比来解释。也就是说,具有较大平均纤维面积和较高纤维面积比例的肌肉往往密度更高。重要的是,使用我们提供的与年龄和区域相关的肌肉密度测量值可以提高 PCSA 估计的准确性。尽管我们发现了与个体发育和解剖区域相关的统计学显著差异,但如果不能直接测量密度,则应使用本文中提供的具体值来提高准确性。如果更喜欢比以前文献中提出的更经过验证的单一肌肉密度常数,则 1.0558 和 1.0502 g/cm 分别是在所有成年和幼年肌肉中使用的合理常数。