06 Fakultät Luft- und Raumfahrttechnik und Geodäsie
Permanent URI for this collectionhttps://elib.uni-stuttgart.de/handle/11682/7
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Item Open Access Experiments meet simulations : understanding skeletal muscle mechanics to address clinical problems(2024) Ateş, Filiz; Röhrle, OliverThis article aims to present some novel experimental approaches and computational methods providing detailed insights into the mechanical behavior of skeletal muscles relevant to clinical problems associated with managing and treating musculoskeletal diseases. The mechanical characterization of skeletal muscles in vivo is crucial for better understanding of, prevention of, or intervention in movement alterations due to exercise, aging, or pathologies related to neuromuscular diseases. To achieve this, we suggest an intraoperative experimental method including direct measurements of human muscle forces supported by computational methodologies. A set of intraoperative experiments indicated the major role of extracellular matrix (ECM) in spastic cerebral palsy. The force data linked to joint function are invaluable and irreplaceable for evaluating individual muscles however, they are not feasible in many situations. Three‐dimensional, continuum‐mechanical models provide a way to predict the exerted muscle forces. To obtain, however, realistic predictions, it is important to investigate the muscle not by itself, but embedded within the respective musculoskeletal system, for example, a 6‐muscle upper arm model, and the ability to obtain non‐invasively, or at least, minimally invasively material parameters for continuum‐mechanical skeletal muscle models, for example, by presently proposed homogenization methodologies. Botulinum toxin administration as a treatment option for spasticity is exemplified by combining experiments with modeling to find out the mechanical outcomes of altered ECM and the controversial effects of the toxin. The potentials and limitations of both experimental and modeling approaches and how they need each other are discussed.Item Open Access Detecting age-related changes in skeletal muscle mechanics using ultrasound shear wave elastography(2023) Ateş, Filiz; Marquetand, Justus; Zimmer, ManuelaAging leads to a decline in muscle mass and force-generating capacity. Ultrasound shear wave elastography (SWE) is a non-invasive method to capture age-related muscular adaptation. This study assessed biceps brachii muscle (BB) mechanics, hypothesizing that shear elastic modulus reflects (i) passive muscle force increase imposed by length change, (ii) activation-dependent mechanical changes, and (iii) differences between older and younger individuals. Fourteen healthy volunteers aged 60-80 participated. Shear elastic modulus, surface electromyography, and elbow torque were measured at five elbow positions in passive and active states. Data collected from young adults aged 20-40 were compared. The BB passive shear elastic modulus increased from flexion to extension, with the older group exhibiting up to 52.58% higher values. Maximum elbow flexion torque decreased in extended positions, with the older group 23.67% weaker. Significant effects of elbow angle, activity level, and age on total and active shear elastic modulus were found during submaximal contractions. The older group had 20.25% lower active shear elastic modulus at 25% maximum voluntary contraction. SWE effectively quantified passive and activation-dependent BB mechanics, detecting age-related alterations at rest and during low-level activities. These findings suggest shear elastic modulus as a promising biomarker for identifying altered muscle mechanics in aging.