Repository logoRepository logoRepository logoRepository logo
Repository logoRepository logoRepository logoRepository logo
  • Communities & Collections
  • Research Outputs
  • Employees
  • AAAHigh contrastHigh contrast
    EN PL
    • Log In
      Have you forgotten your password?
AAAHigh contrastHigh contrast
EN PL
  • Log In
    Have you forgotten your password?
  1. Home
  2. Bibliografia UPP
  3. Bibliografia UPP
  4. Distribution and length of muscle spindles and their 3D visualisation in the medial gastrocnemius of male and female rats
 
Full item page
Options

Distribution and length of muscle spindles and their 3D visualisation in the medial gastrocnemius of male and female rats

Type
Journal article
Language
English
Date issued
2023
Author
Piotr, M.
Skieresz-Szewczyk, Kinga 
Jackowiak, Hanna 
Celichowski, J.
Faculty
Wydział Medycyny Weterynaryjnej i Nauk o Zwierzętach
Journal
Journal of Anatomy
ISSN
0021-8782
DOI
10.1111/joa.13895
Web address
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/joa.13895
Volume
243
Number
4
Pages from-to
658-663
Abstract (EN)
The spatial distribution of the medial gastrocnemius muscle spindles of 10 male and 10 female rats was analysed under a light microscope, and for the first time, visualised using a 3D model of the muscle. Serial cross-sections of the medial gastrocnemius muscles were separated into 10 divisions along with the proximo-distal axis. The muscle spindles of the rat medial gastrocnemius were predominantly distributed on the proximo-medial divisions of the muscle. There were no sex-related differences in the distribution of the studied receptors. A single division contained an average of 2.71 receptors for animals of both sexes. Moreover, the calculated lengths of male and female rat muscle spindles were comparable, and average lengths did not significantly differ (3.30 ± 1.47 mm for male and 3.26 ± 1.32 mm for female rats). Therefore, the present results fill gaps in recent observations concerning similarities in muscle spindle numbers between male and female animals, despite significant differences in muscle mass and size.
Keywords (EN)
  • 3D reconstruction

  • dimorphism

  • morphology

  • skeletal muscle

License
cc-bycc-by CC-BY - Attribution
Open access date
May 17, 2023
Fundusze Europejskie
  • About repository
  • Contact
  • Privacy policy
  • Cookies

Copyright 2025 Uniwersytet Przyrodniczy w Poznaniu

DSpace Software provided by PCG Academia