Experimental muscle strain injury
The structural and functional strength of a muscle immediately after an experimentally created strain injury was examined to provide clinically relevant information for the early treatment of muscle strain injuries. The extensor digitorum longus muscles of 12 adult male rabbits were studied. Contrac...
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Veröffentlicht in: | The American journal of sports medicine 1993-03, Vol.21 (2), p.190 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng ; jpn |
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Zusammenfassung: | The structural and functional strength of a muscle immediately after an experimentally created strain injury was examined
to provide clinically relevant information for the early treatment of muscle strain injuries. The extensor digitorum longus
muscles of 12 adult male rabbits were studied. Contractile force and shortening, and peak load were determined for control
muscles. A nondisruptive strain injury was created by stretching the experimental muscles just short of complete rup ture.
Contractile force generation and shortening, and peak load were determined after the experimental strain injury. Peak load
was 63% and elongation to rupture was 79% for the experimental muscles relative to the controls. Statistically significant
lower values for con tractile force generation and shortening were also seen in the experimental muscles. Histologic and gross
ex aminations revealed that incomplete disruptions oc curred near the distal muscle-tendon junction. These experimental data
suggest clinical implications, such as 1) a muscle-tendon unit is significantly more susceptible to injury following a strain
injury than normal muscle, 2) early return to the uncontrolled environment of athletic competition may place the injured muscle
at risk for further injury, and 3) therapeutic regimens designed to achieve an early return to competition may further increase
the risk for additional injury by eliminating protective pain mechanisms. Although the decrements in peak load and elongation
to failure are less than normal muscle, the values seem high enough to allow mobilization of the injured extremity and functional
re habilitation. |
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ISSN: | 0363-5465 1552-3365 |
DOI: | 10.1177/036354659302100205 |