Biaxial mechanical properties of passive and tetanized canine diaphragm.
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The architecture, vascular supply, and ease of tetanization make the diaphragm an ideal structure in which to assess multidimensional mechanical properties of active and passive striated muscle. We developed an isolated, perfused canine diaphragm preparation suitable for the assessment of biaxial stress-strain relations in both the resting state and during tetanization. Each of 33 specimens had a wide, flat region (approximately 3 x 3 cm) wherein there was a single predominant fiber direction. Simultaneous, equal stretchings were imposed in the fiber and perpendicular cross-fiber directions over the same strain ranges in both the passive state and during tetanic contraction. Highly nonlinear behavior was seen in the passive state with a limit of extensibility in both directions. The specimens were also markedly anisotropic, with the cross-fiber direction being stiffer than the fiber direction (slopes of the regression line for the stresses in each direction averaged 3.97). Moreover, 31 of the 33 specimens were stiffer in the cross-fiber direction, one was isotropic, and one was stiffer in the fiber direction. During tetanization, the extent and distribution of anisotropy were significantly altered (regression slope averaged 1.08, and 18 specimens were now either isotropic or stiffer in the fiber direction). Disrupting the membranes covering each surface increased extensibility and decreased the anisotropy, thereby suggesting that these membranes bear most of the passive load and contribute greatly to the cross-fiber stiffness and anisotropy of the intact diaphragm. Both before and after disruption of the surface membranes, there was still a consistent increase in cross-fiber stress during tetanization, implying active force generation perpendicular to the fiber direction.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)