Literature DB >> 22010742

A nonlinear model of passive muscle viscosity.

G A Meyer1, A D McCulloch, R L Lieber.   

Abstract

The material properties of passive skeletal muscle are critical to proper function and are frequently a target for therapeutic and interventional strategies. Investigations into the passive viscoelasticity of muscle have primarily focused on characterizing the elastic behavior, largely neglecting the viscous component. However, viscosity is a sizeable contributor to muscle stress and extensibility during passive stretch and thus there is a need for characterization of the viscous as well as the elastic components of muscle viscoelasticity. Single mouse muscle fibers were subjected to incremental stress relaxation tests to characterize the dependence of passive muscle stress on time, strain and strain rate. A model was then developed to describe fiber viscoelasticity incorporating the observed nonlinearities. The results of this model were compared with two commonly used linear viscoelastic models in their ability to represent fiber stress relaxation and strain rate sensitivity. The viscous component of mouse muscle fiber stress was not linear as is typically assumed, but rather a more complex function of time, strain and strain rate. The model developed here, which incorporates these nonlinearities, was better able to represent the stress relaxation behavior of fibers under the conditions tested than commonly used models with linear viscosity. It presents a new tool to investigate the changes in muscle viscous stresses with age, injury and disuse.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 22010742      PMCID: PMC3705798          DOI: 10.1115/1.4004993

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Biomech Eng        ISSN: 0148-0731            Impact factor:   2.097


  36 in total

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8.  Constitutive modeling of skeletal muscle tissue with an explicit strain-energy function.

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9.  The viscoelastic properties of passive eye muscle in primates. II: testing the quasi-linear theory.

Authors:  Christian Quaia; Howard S Ying; Lance M Optican
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2009-08-03       Impact factor: 3.240

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Authors:  Christian Quaia; Howard S Ying; Altah M Nichols; Lance M Optican
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2009-04-01       Impact factor: 3.240

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8.  The passive properties of muscle fibers are velocity dependent.

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9.  Skeletal muscle tensile strain dependence: Hyperviscoelastic nonlinearity.

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10.  Modeling Skeletal Muscle Stress and Intramuscular Pressure: A Whole Muscle Active-Passive Approach.

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