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Journal ArticleDOI

Morphometry of Macaca mulatta forelimb. III. Moment arm of shoulder and elbow muscles.

Kirsten M. Graham, +1 more
- 01 Mar 2003 - 
- Vol. 255, Iss: 3, pp 301-314
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TLDR
The present study provides a comprehensive description of the morphology of the proximal portion of the limb suitable for the development of a musculoskeletal model of the M. mulatta upper limb.
Abstract
The conversion of muscle activity into smooth, purposeful movement of the limb depends complexly on the morphometry of muscles and their mechanical action on the skeleton. Although nonhuman primates are common subjects in motor control experiments (Scott [2000] Can J Physiol Pharmacol 78:923-933), little information is available on the morphometric properties of their upper limbs. One key variable is muscle moment arm, or mechanical advantage, which defines how linear motion or force of a muscle is translated into angular motion or torque at a joint. This study reports moment arm values with respect to joint angle (flexion/extension) of 14 muscles spanning the shoulder and elbow in Macaca mulatta. The magnitude of moment arm values ranged widely across muscles. In some muscles mechanical advantage remained constant with joint angle, whereas the moment arm of others varied strongly. The angle (Theta(f)(o)) at which optimal fascicle length (L(f)(o)) occurred showed strong trends, where the elbow-spanning muscles had Theta(f)(o) values clustered at mid-flexion and the shoulder musculature Theta(f)(o) values tended to be grouped around the neutral joint angle of 0 degrees. Estimates of peak muscle torque for flexor and extensor muscle groups at each joint were surprisingly similar in both magnitude and dependency on joint angle. The present study, along with the previous two in this series (Cheng and Scott [2000] J Morphol 245:206-224; Singh et al. [2002] J Morphol 251:323-332), provides a comprehensive description of the morphology of the proximal portion of the limb suitable for the development of a musculoskeletal model of the M. mulatta upper limb.

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Citations
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The neurobiology of muscle fatigue: 15 years later.

TL;DR: A new approach is described that can be used to identify the functionally significant physiological adjustments that occur during fatiguing contractions that influence the time to task failure.
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Preference Distributions of Primary Motor Cortex Neurons Reflect Control Solutions Optimized for Limb Biomechanics

TL;DR: In the model, movement and load preference distributions matching those observed empirically are only evident when particular features of the musculoskeletal system were included: limb geometry, intersegmental dynamics, and the force-length/velocity properties of muscle were dominant factors in dictating movement preferences, and that of biarticular muscles dictated load preferences.
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Primate Upper Limb Muscles Exhibit Activity Patterns That Differ From Their Anatomical Action During a Postural Task

TL;DR: Examining muscular activity in the primate proximal forelimb during a posture task observed that monoarticular shoulder and elbow muscles varied their activity with loads at the unspanned joint, consistent with the intimate relationship between the primary motor cortex and the motor periphery.
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Topsy-turvy locomotion: biomechanical specializations of the elbow in suspended quadrupeds reflect inverted gravitational constraints

TL;DR: The authors' analysis comparing postures and skeletal morphologies in Choloepus (Pilosa), Pteropus (Chiroptera), Nycticebus (Primates) and Cynocephalus (Dermoptera) revealed that the elbow joints of these animals were kept at flexed angles of 70–100 ° during the stance phase of quadrupedal suspension, which indicates flexor over extensor muscles for body support.
References
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An Introduction to Human Evolutionary Anatomy

Lloyd Paul Aiello, +1 more
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: An Introduction to the Fossil Record, Classification and Phylogenetic Reconstruction, and Anatomical Nomenclature.
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