|
|
||||||||
Department of Internal Medicine, Dallas Veterans Affairs Medical Center, and University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas, Texas 75230
Received 28 May 1996; accepted in final form 30 May 1997.
Wait, J. L., and R. L. Johnson. Patterns of shortening
and thickening of the human diaphragm. J. Appl.
Physiol. 83(4): 1123-1132, 1997.
To study how the human diaphragm changes
configuration during inspiration, we simultaneously measured diaphragm
thickening using ultrasound and inspired volumes using a
pneumotachograph. Diaphragm length was assessed by chest radiography.
We found that thickening and shortening were greatest during a breath
taken primarily with the abdomen. However, the degree of thickening was
greater than expected for fiber shortening, assuming parallel muscle
fibers and no shear. So, to clarify this unexpected finding, we
considered geometric models of the diaphragm. How a muscle thickens as
its fibers shorten is critically dependent on geometry. Thus, if a flat
rectangular sheet of muscle shortens along one dimension, surface
area-to-length ratio along this dimension should remain constant, and
thickness would be inversely proportional to length during shortening.
The simplest model of the diaphragm, however, is a cylindrical sheet of
muscle in the zone of apposition capped by a dome; the ratio of surface
area to radial fiber length in the dome is substantially less than the
ratio of area to length of the cylindrical zone of apposition; hence,
as the zone of apposition shortens while the dome radius remains
constant, the ratio of total surface area to combined length (i.e.,
dome + zone of apposition) must decrease and thickening of the muscle
correspondingly must increase more than expected for a simple
rectangular strip. A similar relationship can be derived between
thickening and length in a muscle sheet with a wedge-shaped insertion
into a thin flat tendon. Comparison of calculations with these types of
models to data from human subjects indicates that the unexpected
thickening in the zone of apposition is explained by the peculiar
geometry of the diaphragm. The greater thickening of the diaphragm in
the zone of apposition suggests that more of the muscle mass and more sarcomeres are retained in the zone of apposition as the dome descends.
Physiologically, this greater thickening may have importance by
reducing wall stress in the zone of apposition and reducing the work or
energy requirements per sarcomere.
diaphragm geometry; thickening ratio; wall stress
| HOME | HELP | FEEDBACK | SUBSCRIPTIONS | ARCHIVE | SEARCH | TABLE OF CONTENTS |
| Visit Other APS Journals Online |