Human lower leg muscles grow asynchronously

Muscle volume must increase substantially during childhood growth to generate the power required to propel the growing body. One unresolved but fundamental question about childhood muscle growth is whether muscles grow at equal rates; that is, if muscles grow in synchrony with each other. In this st...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of anatomy 2024-03, Vol.244 (3), p.476-485
Hauptverfasser: Chow, Brian V. Y., Morgan, Catherine, Rae, Caroline, Warton, David I., Novak, Iona, Davies, Suzanne, Lancaster, Ann, Popovic, Gordana C., Rizzo, Rodrigo R. N., Rizzo, Claudia Y., Kyriagis, Maria, Herbert, Robert D., Bolsterlee, Bart
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Muscle volume must increase substantially during childhood growth to generate the power required to propel the growing body. One unresolved but fundamental question about childhood muscle growth is whether muscles grow at equal rates; that is, if muscles grow in synchrony with each other. In this study, we used magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and advances in artificial intelligence methods (deep learning) for medical image segmentation to investigate whether human lower leg muscles grow in synchrony. Muscle volumes were measured in 10 lower leg muscles in 208 typically developing children (eight infants aged less than 3 months and 200 children aged 5 to 15 years). We tested the hypothesis that human lower leg muscles grow synchronously by investigating whether the volume of individual lower leg muscles, expressed as a proportion of total lower leg muscle volume, remains constant with age. There were substantial age‐related changes in the relative volume of most muscles in both boys and girls (p 
ISSN:0021-8782
1469-7580
DOI:10.1111/joa.13967