Title of article :
Large index-fingertip forces are produced by subject-independent patterns of muscle excitation
Author/Authors :
Francisco J. Valero-Cuevas، نويسنده , , Felix E. Zajac، نويسنده , , Charles G. Burgar، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Pages :
11
From page :
693
To page :
703
Abstract :
Are fingertip forces produced by subject-independent patterns of muscle excitation? If so, understanding the mechanical basis underlying these muscle coordination strategies would greatly assist surgeons in evaluating options for restoring grasping. With the finger in neutral ad- abduction and flexed 45° at the MCP and PIP, and 10° at DIP joints, eight subjects attempted to produce maximal voluntary forces in four orthogonal directions perpendicular to the distal phalanx (palmar, dorsal, lateral and medial) and in one direction collinear with it (distal). Forces were directed within 4.7±2.2° (mean±S.D.) of target and their magnitudes clustered into three distinct levels (p<0.05; post hoc pairwise RMANOVA). Palmar (27.9±4.1 N), distal (24.3±8.3 N) and medial (22.9±7.8 N) forces were highest, lateral (14.7±4.8 N) was intermediate, and dorsal (7.5±1.5 N) was lowest. Normalized fine-wire EMGs from all seven muscles revealed distinct muscle excitation groups for palmar, dorsal and distal forces (p<0.05; post hoc pairwise RMANOVA). Palmar force used flexors, extensors and dorsal interosseous; dorsal force used all muscles; distal force used all muscles except for extensors; medial and lateral forces used all muscles including significant co-excitation of interossei. The excitation strategies predicted to achieve maximal force by a 3-D computer model (four pin joints, inextensible tendons, extensor mechanism and isometric force models for all seven muscles) reproduced the observed use of extensors and absence of palmar interosseous to produce palmar force (to regulate net joint flexion torques), the absence of extensors for distal force, and the use of intrinsics (strong MCP flexors) for dorsal force. The model could not predict the interossei co-excitation seen for medial and lateral forces, which may be a strategy to prevent MCP joint damage. The model predicts distal force to be most sensitive to dorsal interosseous strength, andpalmar and distal forces to be very sensitive to MCP and PIPflexor moment arms, and dorsal force to be sensitiveto the moment arm of and the tension allocation to the PIP extensortendon of the extensor mechanism.
Keywords :
hand , Finger , Grasping , Biomechanical model , Muscle coordination , Electromyography , Maximum voluntarycontraction , EMG
Journal title :
Journal of Biomechanics
Serial Year :
1998
Journal title :
Journal of Biomechanics
Record number :
450726
Link To Document :
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