Active spring muscle model - a new phenomenological model of skeletal muscle mechanics

Lead Research Organisation: University of Birmingham
Department Name: Sport, Exercise & Rehabilitation Science

Abstract

Understanding Machina Carnis, how our muscles mechanically generate movement, is one of the fundamental research questions in human movement science and also has significant implications in many application areas including, to name a few, physiotherapy, sport/exercise science and humanoid robotics. Notwithstanding the scientific achievements over the centuries in elucidating the molecular mechanism of the muscle contraction in micro/nanoscopic levels, one would be surprised to find that our understanding of the muscle becomes substantially elusive when it comes to the actual force production. As a highlighting example, we do not yet have any model that fully explains muscle's behaviour when it is being stretched against an external force (called eccentric contraction). A well-known fact is that the muscle works as an efficient "brake" during eccentric contraction, actively stabilising itself against a stretch consuming a just minimal amount of metabolic energy. Eccentric contraction is known to make a critical contribution to the muscle's mechanical efficiency, but currently existing muscle models offer very limited explanations on eccentric contraction and little effort has been put forward to rationally recognize this issue and to develop an alternative model that has a wider explanatory scope.

This "inconvenient truth" in muscle mechanics has been particularly overlooked in the upper-layer, musculoskeletal modelling studies, where simple muscle models are highly preferred in order to efficiently simulate the behaviour a large group of muscles. Despite numerous problems of the conventional muscle models in predicting dynamic contractile behaviour of the muscle, including eccentric contraction, the eighty years old Hill-type muscle model is predominantly used as a standard phenomenological model of the musculoskeletal simulation studies. This is not because the researchers in this area are unaware of its weaknesses, but because there is no alternative model that can yet replace the Hill-type muscle model.

For these reasons, the proposed study aims to build and validate an effective alternative to the Hill-type muscle model. The key insight is on the recently proposed titin-based muscle contraction theories, collectively called the active spring model that shows great potential for elucidating many unexplained dynamic muscle behaviours. In addition to the traditional sliding-filament mechanism between the actin and the myosin filament, the active spring model highlights the mechanical role of titin, an additional spring-like filament that connects those filaments, in regulating the stiffness of the active muscle. It is important, however, that the proposed study does not aim to develop a purely explanatory, microscopic model of which the mechanical and parametric simplicity is often sacrificed, but aims to develop a simple and reliable phenomenological model that can be readily used by upper-layer musculoskeletal researchers. By developing such a model, the study is expected to bridge an eighty-years standing gap between muscle and musculoskeletal studies.

The proposed study will take an integrative approach to achieve this goal. The study will first focus on building a model of single fiber/muscle under a controlled in vitro setup. To ensure the reliability as a general-purpose muscle mechanics model, rigorous validations will be conducted under various dynamic contractile situations, including eccentric contraction and naturalistic locomotion-like stimulation patterns. After that, the model will be further validated in the in vivo human experiment, focusing on predicting the mechanics of leg muscle during locomotion, by incorporating novel non-invasive techniques that estimate the architectural and mechanical changes of the working muscle. As a pathway to impact, the model and the simulation code will be open to general musculoskeletal modellers/researchers via OpenMuscle.org, an open-source muscle project website.

Technical Summary

HMM has been the predominant muscle mechanics model in biomechanical studies due to its relatively simple and clear mechanical structure. However, it is well-known that the HMM suffers many problems that seriously undermine its reliability, such as its lack of explanation on eccentric contractions and dynamic force patterns during sub-maximal contractions. The proposed study aims to develop a new "active-spring" muscle model (ASMM) that can effectively replace the HMM. The ASMM highlights an active, spring-like property of the titin filament in regulating the stiffness of the muscle, and provides a novel insight of interpreting the muscle's dynamic contractile behaviour, including eccentric contractions, as a mechanical interaction between the cross-bridges and titin. The succinct mechanical structure of the ASMM finally opens up the possibility of developing a reliable phenomenological muscle model, whose complexity is as low as the HMM.

To develop this model, the proposed study will take a two-stage approach of developing and validating the model. In the first stage, the study will focus on in vitro experiments on electrically stimulated mouse muscles. The model development procedure will be focused on predicting 1) dynamic and residual force enhancements during eccentric contractions, 2) activation-dependent force production, and 3) a realistic force pattern under locomotion-like length and activation profile. The second stage of the development will be focused on a human in vivo study to ensure the model's applicability to human biomechanics studies. In this stage, the study will first focus on developing novel methods of non-invasively and reliably estimating the activation level and the force output of individual muscle in vivo, using high-density EMG, ultrasound tomography and tensiomyography. Ultimately, the performance of the developed muscle model in predicting the mechanics of the tibialis anterior during locomotion will be tested and validated.

Planned Impact

Regarding the significant impact of Hill-type muscle model on biology/biomedical sciences, education and industry over eighty years, the impact of the new phenomenological muscle mechanics model is expected to be broad-reaching and substantial and also is not limited to fundamental research. The applicant will make sure that the developed model and its simulation code will be open to anyone who uses muscle models either in academia or industry. Specifically, the applicant will develop an "OpenMuscle" project web-site as a part of "SimTK.org", a free project-hosting platform for open-source biomedical computational models for education, research and industrial development. In addition, the applicant aims to facilitate the interaction between the developers (muscle/musculoskeletal mechanics researchers) and the existing or the potential users (clinicians, physiotherapists, roboticians and industrial product developers) via an "OpenMuscle workshop", designed to introduce the state-of-the-art of the muscle modelling research and to identify major demands from the application domain of musculoskeletal simulation models. In addition, the applicant will participate in the "Meet the Expert" event in Birmingham Science Museum in order to increase the public awareness on what is the the state-of-the-art models and techniques in muscle and musculoskeletal mechanics, how they helps us to better understand human movement, and how these techniques can be potentially utilized to cure various motor diseases.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Description As a part of an ongoing collaboration with U of Calgary (Walter Herzog) and also a new collaborator in musculoskeletal simulation (Shinjiro Sueda, Texas A & M Univ), we evaluated the computational stability of the Hill-type muscle model, a conventional muscle model that has bee used in the majority of musculoskeletal simulation studies, and confirmed that the use of the Hill-type muscle model can seriously jeopardise the stability of the computational simulation due to its inherent computational instability originates from the wrong assumption. This simulation study, together with a review of the used of Hill-type muscle models in computer animation and biomechanics, was published to Royal Society Interface as a review article.

In addition, as the result of work done by the former postdoc Jasper Verheul, we developed a new method of ultrasound-based muscle fiber tracking, which will be actively used for phase-2 human experimental study. This new method has been published in IEEE Tran on Biomedical Engineering. Also, another set of simulation studies on the development of a new musculoskeletal simulation model that disserentially simulates the mechanics of muscles and skeletons, and on the inertial effect of calf muscle during running measured by the development simulator are done, with findings that a significant improvement of the simulation accuracy can be achieved by the differential simulation. The result are published in ACM Transaction on Graphics and J of Biomechanics respectively.
Exploitation Route The outcomes of the award so far, described above, are all expected to be highly useful to others. Especially, the ultrasound tracking method was made publically available so will be used not just by many researchers, but also users in the rehabilitation and biomedical industry that use the muscle tracking technique. Also, the new musculoskeletal simulator is a general simulator that can be used for many different musculoskeletal biomechanics studies. Finally, the review article about the Hill-type muscle is expected to significantly increase the public awareness about the numerical issues of the famous Hill-type muscle model and therefore is expected to legitimate the ongoing development of a new muscle mechanics model.
Sectors Healthcare

 
Description Collaborative research grant from Korean Ministry of Science and ICT (with Seoul National University)
Amount ₩40,000,000 (KRW)
Organisation Government of South Korea 
Sector Public
Country Korea, Republic of
Start 01/2020 
End 12/2020
 
Description UK-Korea exchange award (MRC funded)
Amount £20,000 (GBP)
Funding ID MC_PC_18068 
Organisation Medical Research Council (MRC) 
Sector Public
Country United Kingdom
Start 04/2019 
End 12/2020
 
Description Collaboration with University of Calgary 
Organisation University of Calgary
Country Canada 
Sector Academic/University 
PI Contribution Data collection has been conducted in Prof Walter Herzog in The University of Calgary, a world-leading expert in muscle mechanics and also the named collaborator of the grant. PI visited the lab in July 2019 and participated in data collection. Prior to the visit, PI has been involved in experimental design and data analysis.
Collaborator Contribution Prof Walter Herzog and his postdoc Dr Ian Smith are participating in data collection and analysis.
Impact Six rat soleus data obtained so far. The analysis on the data have resulted in the following two abstracts accepted at international conferences: S. Yeo and W. Herzog "Can a Simple Phenomenological Model Explain the Mechanics of Eccentric Contractions?", International Society of Biomechanics 2019 I. C. Smith, S. Yeo and W. Herzog "The relaxation shoulder is delayed by active stretch at long but not short muscle lengths in rat soleus muscle assessed in situ", Canadian Society of Biomechanics 2020
Start Year 2019
 
Description Invited Talk at MMU 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Schools
Results and Impact Invited Talk at Musculoskeletal Science and Sports Medicine Center at Manchester Metropolitan University: "Hill-type muscle models for simulation studies: a critical appraisal from a computational perspective"
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2022