Passive mechanics of canine internal abdominal muscles.

The internal abdominal muscles are biaxially loaded in vivo, and therefore length-tension relations along and transverse to the directions of the muscle fibers are important in understanding their mechanical properties. We hypothesized that 1) internal oblique and transversus abdominis form an internal abdominal composite muscle with altered compliance than that of either muscle individually, and 2) anisotropy, different compliances in orthogonal directions, of internal abdominal composite muscle is less pronounced than that of its individual muscles. To test these hypotheses, in vitro mechanical testing was performed on 5 x 5 cm squares of transversus abdominis, internal oblique, and the two muscles together as a composite. These tissues were harvested from the left lateral side of abdominal muscles of eleven mongrel dogs (15-23 kg) and placed in a bath of oxygenated Krebs solution. Each tissue strip was attached to a biaxial mechanical testing device. Each muscle was passively lengthened and shortened along muscle fibers, transverse to fibers, or simultaneously along and transverse to muscle fibers. Both transversus abdominis and internal oblique muscles demonstrated less extensibility in the direction transverse to muscle fibers than along fibers. Biaxial loading caused a stiffening effect that was greater in the direction along the fibers than transverse to the fibers. Furthermore, the abdominal muscle composite was less compliant than either muscle alone in the direction of the muscle fibers. Taken together, our data suggested that the internal abdominal composite tissue has complex mechanical properties that are dependent on the mechanical properties of internal oblique and transversus abdominis muscles.

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