MRI-based anatomical characterisation of lower-limb muscles in older women.

The ability of muscles to produce force depends, among others, on their anatomical features and it is altered by ageing-associated weakening. However, a clear characterisation of these features, highly relevant for older individuals, is still lacking. This study hence aimed at characterising muscle...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Erica Montefiori, Barbara M Kalkman, William H Henson, Margaret A Paggiosi, Eugene V McCloskey, Claudia Mazzà
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242973
id doaj-3f032f976e0843fc956f51684ad074f4
record_format Article
spelling doaj-3f032f976e0843fc956f51684ad074f42021-03-04T12:46:23ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-011512e024297310.1371/journal.pone.0242973MRI-based anatomical characterisation of lower-limb muscles in older women.Erica MontefioriBarbara M KalkmanWilliam H HensonMargaret A PaggiosiEugene V McCloskeyClaudia MazzàThe ability of muscles to produce force depends, among others, on their anatomical features and it is altered by ageing-associated weakening. However, a clear characterisation of these features, highly relevant for older individuals, is still lacking. This study hence aimed at characterising muscle volume, length, and physiological cross-sectional area (PCSA) and their variability, between body sides and between individuals, in a group of post-menopausal women. Lower-limb magnetic resonance images were acquired from eleven participants (69 (7) y. o., 66.9 (7.7) kg, 159 (3) cm). Twenty-three muscles were manually segmented from the images and muscle volume, length and PCSA were calculated from this dataset. Personalised maximal isometric force was then calculated using the latter information. The percentage difference between the muscles of the two lower limbs was up to 89% and 22% for volume and length, respectively, and up to 84% for PCSA, with no recognisable pattern associated with limb dominance. Between-subject coefficients of variation reached 36% and 13% for muscle volume and length, respectively. Generally, muscle parameters were similar to previous literature, but volumes were smaller than those from in-vivo young adults and slightly higher than ex-vivo ones. Maximal isometric force was found to be on average smaller than those obtained from estimates based on linear scaling of ex-vivo-based literature values. In conclusion, this study quantified for the first time anatomical asymmetry of lower-limb muscles in older women, suggesting that symmetry should not be assumed in this population. Furthermore, we showed that a scaling approach, widely used in musculoskeletal modelling, leads to an overestimation of the maximal isometric force for most muscles. This heavily questions the validity of this approach for older populations. As a solution, the unique dataset of muscle segmentation made available with this paper could support the development of alternative population-based scaling approaches, together with that of automatic tools for muscle segmentation.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242973
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Erica Montefiori
Barbara M Kalkman
William H Henson
Margaret A Paggiosi
Eugene V McCloskey
Claudia Mazzà
spellingShingle Erica Montefiori
Barbara M Kalkman
William H Henson
Margaret A Paggiosi
Eugene V McCloskey
Claudia Mazzà
MRI-based anatomical characterisation of lower-limb muscles in older women.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Erica Montefiori
Barbara M Kalkman
William H Henson
Margaret A Paggiosi
Eugene V McCloskey
Claudia Mazzà
author_sort Erica Montefiori
title MRI-based anatomical characterisation of lower-limb muscles in older women.
title_short MRI-based anatomical characterisation of lower-limb muscles in older women.
title_full MRI-based anatomical characterisation of lower-limb muscles in older women.
title_fullStr MRI-based anatomical characterisation of lower-limb muscles in older women.
title_full_unstemmed MRI-based anatomical characterisation of lower-limb muscles in older women.
title_sort mri-based anatomical characterisation of lower-limb muscles in older women.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description The ability of muscles to produce force depends, among others, on their anatomical features and it is altered by ageing-associated weakening. However, a clear characterisation of these features, highly relevant for older individuals, is still lacking. This study hence aimed at characterising muscle volume, length, and physiological cross-sectional area (PCSA) and their variability, between body sides and between individuals, in a group of post-menopausal women. Lower-limb magnetic resonance images were acquired from eleven participants (69 (7) y. o., 66.9 (7.7) kg, 159 (3) cm). Twenty-three muscles were manually segmented from the images and muscle volume, length and PCSA were calculated from this dataset. Personalised maximal isometric force was then calculated using the latter information. The percentage difference between the muscles of the two lower limbs was up to 89% and 22% for volume and length, respectively, and up to 84% for PCSA, with no recognisable pattern associated with limb dominance. Between-subject coefficients of variation reached 36% and 13% for muscle volume and length, respectively. Generally, muscle parameters were similar to previous literature, but volumes were smaller than those from in-vivo young adults and slightly higher than ex-vivo ones. Maximal isometric force was found to be on average smaller than those obtained from estimates based on linear scaling of ex-vivo-based literature values. In conclusion, this study quantified for the first time anatomical asymmetry of lower-limb muscles in older women, suggesting that symmetry should not be assumed in this population. Furthermore, we showed that a scaling approach, widely used in musculoskeletal modelling, leads to an overestimation of the maximal isometric force for most muscles. This heavily questions the validity of this approach for older populations. As a solution, the unique dataset of muscle segmentation made available with this paper could support the development of alternative population-based scaling approaches, together with that of automatic tools for muscle segmentation.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0242973
work_keys_str_mv AT ericamontefiori mribasedanatomicalcharacterisationoflowerlimbmusclesinolderwomen
AT barbaramkalkman mribasedanatomicalcharacterisationoflowerlimbmusclesinolderwomen
AT williamhhenson mribasedanatomicalcharacterisationoflowerlimbmusclesinolderwomen
AT margaretapaggiosi mribasedanatomicalcharacterisationoflowerlimbmusclesinolderwomen
AT eugenevmccloskey mribasedanatomicalcharacterisationoflowerlimbmusclesinolderwomen
AT claudiamazza mribasedanatomicalcharacterisationoflowerlimbmusclesinolderwomen
_version_ 1714801658115915776