Fluoromicrometry: A Method for Measuring Muscle Length Dynamics with Biplanar Videofluoroscopy

ABSTRACT Accurate measurements of muscle length changes are essential for understanding the biomechanics of musculoskeletal systems, and can provide insights into muscular work, force, and power. Muscle length has typically been measured in vivo using sonomicrometry, a method that measures distances...

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Published inJournal of experimental zoology. Part A, Ecological genetics and physiology Vol. 325; no. 7; pp. 399 - 408
Main Authors Camp, Ariel L., Astley, Henry C., Horner, Angela M., Roberts, Thomas J., Brainerd, Elizabeth L.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Blackwell Publishing Ltd 01.08.2016
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ISSN1932-5223
1932-5231
DOI10.1002/jez.2031

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Summary:ABSTRACT Accurate measurements of muscle length changes are essential for understanding the biomechanics of musculoskeletal systems, and can provide insights into muscular work, force, and power. Muscle length has typically been measured in vivo using sonomicrometry, a method that measures distances by sending and receiving sound pulses between piezoelectric crystals. Here, we evaluate an alternative method, fluoromicrometry, which measures muscle length changes over time by tracking the three‐dimensional positions of implanted, radio‐opaque markers via biplanar videofluoroscopy. To determine the accuracy and precision of fluoromicrometry, we simultaneously measured length changes of an isolated muscle, the frog sartorius, in an in vitro setup using both fluoromicrometry and a servomotor. For fluoromicrometry to perfectly match the results of the servomotor, the relationship between the two measurements should be linear, with a slope of 1. Measurements of muscle shortening from fluoromicrometry and the motor were compared across 11 isotonic contractions. The precision of fluoromicrometry was ±0.09 mm, measured as the root mean square error of the regression of fluoromicrometry versus servomotor muscle lengths. Fluoromicrometry was also accurate: the mean slope of the fluoromicrometry–servomotor regressions did not differ significantly from the ideal line once off‐axis motion was removed. Thus, fluoromicrometry provides a useful alternative for measuring muscle length, especially in studies of live animals, as it permits long‐term marker implantation, wireless data collection, and increased spatial sampling. Fluoromicrometry can also be used with X‐Ray Reconstruction of Moving Morphology to simultaneously measure muscle shortening and skeletal kinematics, providing a potent new tool for biomechanics research.
Bibliography:ark:/67375/WNG-NSGP63SM-6
ArticleID:JEZ2031
National Science Foundation - No. 1120967; No. 1262156
istex:9D773809020787C33A020BCFDF359F0030CDA604
Bushnell Research and Education Fund
National Institutes of Health - No. AR055295
Grant sponsor: Bushnell Research and Education Fund; Grant Sponsor: National Science Foundation; Grant numbers: 1120967 and 1262156; Grant Sponsor: National Institutes of Health; Grant number: AR055295.
Conflict of interest: None.
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ISSN:1932-5223
1932-5231
DOI:10.1002/jez.2031