Skeletal muscle architecture is defined as the arrangement of fibers in a muscle and functionally defines performance capacity.
Architectural values are used to model muscle-joint behavior and to make surgical decisions. The two most extensively used
human lower extremity data sets consist of five total specimens of unknown size, gender, and age. Therefore, it is critically
important to generate a high-fidelity human lower extremity muscle architecture data set. We disassembled 27 muscles from
21 human lower extremities to characterize muscle fiber length and physiologic cross-sectional area, which define the excursion
and force-generating capacities of a muscle. Based on their architectural features, the soleus, gluteus medius, and vastus
lateralis are the strongest muscles, whereas the sartorius, gracilis, and semitendinosus have the largest excursion. The plantarflexors,
knee extensors, and hip adductors are the strongest muscle groups acting at each joint, whereas the hip adductors and hip
extensors have the largest excursion. Contrary to previous assertions, two-joint muscles do not necessarily have longer fibers
than single-joint muscles as seen by the similarity of knee flexor and extensor fiber lengths. These high-resolution data
will facilitate the development of more accurate musculoskeletal models and challenge existing theories of muscle design;
we believe they will aid in surgical decision making.
Two of the authors (SRW, RLL) have received funding from National Institutes of Health Grants HD048501 and HD050837 and the
Department of Veterans Affairs.
Each author certifies that his or her institution has approved or waived approval for the human protocol for this investigation
and that all investigations were conducted in conformity with ethical principles of research.