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Morphology of the Patellar Tendon and the Contractility Response of the Quadriceps: Symmetry and Gender Analysis.

TLDR
In this article, the authors describe the differences between the dominant and non-dominant leg regarding contractility response and quadriceps strength and the morphology and stiffness of the patellar tendon in a group of physically active men and women.
Abstract
The purpose of the study was to describe the differences between the dominant and non-dominant leg regarding contractility response and quadriceps strength and the morphology and stiffness of the patellar tendon (PT) in a group of physically active men and women. Fifty physically active subjects (36 men and 14 women) were evaluated for morphology and stiffness of the PT, contractility response of the rectus femoris of the quadriceps, isometric strength of the quadriceps and hamstrings, and isokinetic strength (concentric and eccentric) at 60°/s of the knee extensors. The measurements were made on the subject’s dominant and non-dominant leg. The men showed a greater thickness of the PT in both legs compared to the women. Regarding the contractility response, the women recorded a 10.1 ± 16.2% (p = 0.038) greater contraction time (ct) in the dominant versus the non-dominant leg and the men recorded 11.9% (p = 0.040) higher values in the dominant leg compared to the women. In all the absolute strength measurements the men recorded higher values (p < 0.05) than the women, however, when the values were normalised with respect to the muscle mass of the leg these differences disappeared. The dominant leg showed values of isometric strength and eccentric strength at 60°/s (p < 0.05) greater than the non-dominant leg. The reference values provided in this study of the knee extensors and PT may be useful for detecting possible muscular or tendinous anomalies.

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Citations
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Differences in the cross‐sectional area along the ankle tendons with both age and sex

TL;DR: Great magnitude of morpho-structural differences was discovered in the AT; there are region-specific differences in the CSA of ankle tendons within the three groups and between them; and there were no differences in tendon CSA between sexes.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Preseason strength and flexibility imbalances associated with athletic injuries in female collegiate athletes

TL;DR: There was a trend for higher injury rates to be associated with knee flexor or hip extensor imbalances of 15% or more on either side of the body.
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Strength of isometric and isokinetic contractions: knee muscles of men aged 20 to 86.

TL;DR: The men in the oldest age group generally took longer than the younger men to reach peak torque during the isometric contractions, and the torque values provide base-lines for evaluating patients with knee joint disabilities.
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Maximum voluntary joint torque as a function of joint angle and angular velocity: Model development and application to the lower limb

TL;DR: This model provides an efficient method by which strength variations with joint angle and angular velocity may be incorporated into comparisons between joint torques calculated by inverse dynamics and the maximum available joint torque.
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Spatial fiber type distribution in normal human muscle Histochemical and tensiomyographical evaluation.

TL;DR: Findings suggest that the contraction time obtained by TMG may be useful for non-invasive examining of muscle fiber types spatial distribution in humans.
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Real-time sonoelastography: findings in patients with symptomatic achilles tendons and comparison to healthy volunteers.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the performance of real-time sonoelastography (SE) for the differentiation of Achilles tendon alterations of tendinopathy compared to clinical examination and conventional ultrasound (US).
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