Kinesiology - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Kinesiology

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Tension realized is the sum-total of contractile & non-contractile elements ... Tension production will soon become linear and muscle fiber will react elastically ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Kinesiology


1
Kinesiology
  • Andrew L. McDonough, PT, EdD
  • Dominican College
  • Physical Therapy Program

2
Kinesiology
  • Functional anatomy (traditional)
  • Biomechanics
  • Statics
  • Dynamics
  • Kinematics (geometry of motion)
  • Kinetics (forces that account for motion)

3
Voluntary Movement Factors Levels of Analysis
  • (Macro)physiologic
  • Biomechanics
  • Motor control
  • Motor learning

4
Types of Motion
  • Translatory
  • A
    B
  • Rotary constant radius
  • Curvilinear radius varies

5
Basic Components of aJoint System
  • Muscle attachments (proximal distal)
  • Axis of rotation
  • Fixed center
  • Instant center
  • Innervation

6
Terms
  • Agonist Antagonist (context-dependent)
  • Synergist (3 definitions)
  • Primary vs. Secondary (Tertiary) movers
  • Fixators/stabilizers Immobilizers

7
Muscle Factors
  • Physiological cross-section
  • Geometry of muscle/tendon

8
Physiological Cross-Section
Less force
More force
9
Geometry
  • Type types
  • Fusiform (cigar-shaped)
  • Penniform (feather-shaped)
  • Bi-pennate
  • Uni-pennate
  • Multi-pennate

Bi-
Uni-
Multi-
10
Significance of Geometry
  • Fusiform
  • Parallel arrangement of fibers (all have same
    proximal and distal attachments)
  • Virtually ALL (less 10) of force delivered to
    attachments
  • Have large force (torque) generating potential
  • Muscles/fibers to be impulsive but not endurant

11
Significance of Geometry
  • Penniform
  • Implies an angle-of-insertion
  • Gross muscle level
  • Muscle fiber level

.
angle-of-insertion
12
Angle-of-insertion
resultant force
X
.
angle-of-insertion
axis
rotary component (Y) force
.
900
(joint) compressive component (X)
T f x d
13
Muscle Contraction Types
  • Isometric
  • Isotonic
  • Concentric (shortening contraction)
  • Eccentric (lengthening contraction)
  • Isokinetic (?)

14
Muscle ContractionLevels of Analysis
  • Sarcomere (microanatomical)
  • Gross muscle

15
Isometric Contraction
  • Sarcomere shortens delivering force to tendon
  • Gross length remains constant

Demo
16
Concentric Contraction
  • Sarcomere shortens
  • Gross muscle shortens pulling on bony attachments
  • If the muscle crosses a joint the joints moves
    through a ROM via torque created

Demo
17
Eccentric Contraction
  • A lengthening reaction
  • Occurs in a muscle that has already undergone a
    concentric contraction
  • External force applied exceeds internal muscular
    force being generated
  • Muscle lengthens under neuro-motor control

18
Sources of Tension
  • Muscle (contractile element)
  • Tendon (non-contractile element CT)

19
Premise Concentric vs. Eccentric Contractions
  • Per comparable volumes of muscle tissue, more
    tension will always be realized during eccentric
    contractions.

20
Analysis
  • Concentric contraction
  • Source of tension
  • Contractile elements (muscle)
  • Eccentric contraction
  • Source of tension
  • Contractile elements (muscle)
  • Non-contractile elements (CT tendon)
  • The tendon is in a pre-loaded condition due to
    previous concentric contraction

21
EMG Activity
  • Ratio 0.5 1.0 (eccentric concentric)
  • Tension realized is the sum-total of contractile
    non-contractile elements
  • Muscle working eccentrically will not have to
    work as hard since some the total tension is
    provided by the pre-loaded tendon

22
Metabolic Activity
  • Consequently if the muscle is not working as hard
    under eccentric control less energy is required
    to sustain a contraction by a factor of 10 30
  • Less lactic acid is produced eccentrically

23
Muscle Contraction Fiber Types
  • Concentric Type I and IIa motor units most
    active
  • Eccentric Type IIb motor units most active

24
Relationship Between a Muscle (or Muscle Fiber)
Tension Production
  • Blix experiments

probe
dynamometer
frog soleus muscle fiber
25
Muscle Lengthened Passively
  • Tension production will soon become linear and
    muscle fiber will react elastically

Passive Tension Curve
Tension
Length
26
Muscle Stimulated at VariousPre-set Lengths
Shortening Lengthening
60
Blix Curve or Length-tension
Curve
Tension
0
100
Rest length
Length
27
Length-Tension Relationship
  • During active contraction a muscle (or muscle
    fiber) will generate maximal tension at or
    slightly greater than rest length.
  • Levels of analysis
  • Gross muscle
  • Muscle fiber/sarcomere

Demo
28
Motor Control System
  • Constantly evaluates tension via length
    assessment (GTOs spindles)
  • Often optimizes tension via maintaining muscle
    length
  • Usually goes out of its way to maintain length

29
Question
  • What happens when a muscle is called upon to do
    the job it is intended to do (i.e., shorten)?

30
Muscle Types
  • One-joint
  • Two (two-or-more)-joint

31
Active Insufficiency
  • Two-joint muscle shortens simultaneously over
    both joints
  • Rapidly loses length (shifts left on the
    length-tension curve)
  • Force and torque production decrease quickly

32
Two-Joint MusclesGeneral Rule
  • In a motor control context, two-muscles rarely
    contract over both (all) joints simultaneously
  • While one end of the muscle is shortening over
    its associated joint
  • The other end is being lengthened over its
    associated joint
  • The net effect preserve length and therefore
    force and torque
  • Motor control system avoids active insufficiency
    in most cases

33
Passive Insufficiency
  • Muscle passively elongated over both (all) joint
    simultaneously
  • At some point the muscle reaches its elastic
    limit
  • ROM will be limited across both joints

34
Velocity Tension Relationship
Concentric
Eccentric
Inverse Relationship
Tension
-

0
100
Demo
Velocity
35
Other Terms
  • Strength ability to generate tension
  • Power rate of doing work (Tf x d)
  • Low power
  • High power
  • Endurance ability to sustain the work being
    preformed

36
Other Terms
  • Arthrokinematics study of the relationship
    between (among) articulating bony surfaces
  • Joint play
  • Congruency
  • Component motion
  • Overall motion

37
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