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The Journal of Neuroscience, March 15, 2001, 21(6):2150-2158
Tension Distribution to the Five Digits of the Hand by
Neuromuscular Compartments in the Macaque Flexor Digitorum
Profundus
Marc H.
Schieber,
Jennifer
Gardinier, and
Jie
Liu
Departments of Neurology and of Neurobiology and Anatomy,
University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry, Rochester,
New York 14642
 |
ABSTRACT |
The macaque flexor digitorum profundus (FDP) consists of a muscle
belly with four neuromuscular regions and a complex insertion tendon
that divides to serve all five digits of the hand. To determine the
extent to which compartments within FDP act on single versus multiple
digits, we stimulated the primary nerve branch innervating each
neuromuscular region while recording the tension in all five distal
insertion tendons. Stimulation of each primary nerve branch activated a
distinct region of the muscle belly, so that each primary nerve branch
and the muscle region innervated can be considered a neuromuscular
compartment. Although each neuromuscular compartment provided a
distinct distribution of tension across the five distal tendons, none
acted on only one digital tendon. Most of the distribution of tension
to multiple digits could be attributed to passive biomechanical interactions in the complex insertion tendon, although for the larger
compartments a wider distribution resulted from the broad insertion of
the muscle belly. Nerve ligations excluded contributions of spinal
reflexes or distal axon reflexes to the distribution of tension to
multiple digits. We conclude that the macaque FDP consists of four
neuromuscular compartments, each of which provides a distinct
distribution of tension to multiple digits.
Key words:
compartment; digits; distribution; fingers; force; hand; macaque; multitendoned; muscle; neuromuscular; tension; thumb
 |
INTRODUCTION |
Several muscles in various mammalian
species in recent years have been shown to consist of multiple
neuromuscular compartments. A compartmentalized muscle consists of
multiple anatomic regions of muscle fibers, each region innervated by a
separate primary nerve branch (English and Weeks, 1984
;
Balice-Gordon and Thompson, 1988
; English, 1990
; Segal et al., 1991
;
Drake et al., 1993
; Sanders et al., 1994
; Vanden Noven et al., 1994
;
Liu et al., 1997
). The regional glycogen depletion produced by
prolonged stimulation of a given primary nerve branch indicates that
each compartment contains all the muscle fibers of motor units whose
axons enter the muscle through that nerve branch (English and
Letbetter, 1982
). The borders between different compartments often are
sharply defined by fascicular boundaries within the muscle, although in
some cases interdigitation of muscle fibers from adjacent compartments
occurs at a less discrete boundary. EMG recordings during active
behaviors demonstrate that each compartment can be activated by the
nervous system relatively independently of the others (English, 1984
; English and Weeks, 1987
; Pratt and Loeb, 1991
; Pratt et al., 1991
). Because compartmentalized muscles often have distributed origins and/or
distributed insertions, contraction of the various compartments can
provide different mechanical effects for generating movements and stabilizing postures (Chanaud et al., 1991
; Fritz et al., 1992
).
The multitendoned extrinsic finger muscles of the hand have extremely
distributed insertions. Unlike most other muscles, these muscles give
off multiple insertion tendons, each attaching to a different digit. In
macaque monkeys, each of these muscles consists of multiple regions of
muscle fibers innervated by different nerve branches (Serlin and
Schieber, 1993
). One such muscle is the flexor digitorum profundus
(FDP). In both monkeys and humans, various regions of FDP can be
activated differentially under voluntary control from the nervous
system (Jeneson et al., 1990
; Schieber, 1993
; Kilbreath and Gandevia,
1994
). Because most of the power for flexing and extending the digits
is provided by extrinsic muscles (Long et al., 1970
; Li et al., 2000
),
knowing whether the neuromuscular compartments of multitendoned muscles
each act on a single digit versus multiple digits is key to
understanding neural control of finger movements.
The degree to which compartments of multitendoned finger muscles
distribute tension across the digits has yet to be examined, however.
In the present study, we therefore determined how the tension generated
by each region of the macaque FDP is distributed among the five digits
of the hand by directly stimulating each primary nerve branch.
Comparing the tension distributions produced by passive loading with
those produced by active contraction, we also examined the extent to
which distribution of tension to multiple digits resulted from passive
mechanical connections among the tendons versus the action of each
region of the muscle belly. Finally, we cut first the proximal median
and ulnar nerves and second each primary nerve branch to determine
whether spinal reflexes or axon reflexes, respectively, contributed to
the distribution of tension to multiple tendons.
 |
MATERIALS AND METHODS |
All procedures for the care and use of these purpose-bred
monkeys complied with the United States Public Health Service Policy on
Humane Care and Use of Laboratory Animals, followed the Public Health
Service Guide for the Care and Use of Laboratory Animals, and were
approved by the University Committee on Animal Resources at the
University of Rochester. All procedures were performed under deep
surgical anesthesia.
Surgical preparation. Studies were performed on five male
pigtail monkeys (Macaca nemestrina, 2-4 kg). Monkeys were
premedicated with ketamine (15 mg/kg, i.m.) and atropine (0.04 mg/kg,
i.m.) and then anesthetized with thiopental (25 mg/kg, i.v.), using supplemental doses as needed to maintain deep surgical anesthesia judged by the absence of blink and pinna reflexes. Monkeys were intubated for airway control. Heart rate and blood oxygen saturation were monitored continuously with a pulse oximeter. Core body
temperature was monitored with a rectal probe and maintained at
34-37°C with a heating blanket.
Once the monkey was surgically anesthetized, the tendons of FDP were
dissected free in each digit of the right hand. The skin on the palmar
surface of each digit was incised longitudinally from the
metacarpophalangeal joint to the distal phalanx. For eventual
attachment to tension transducers, a separate 2-0 supramid suture was
tied through and around each FDP tendon proximal to the distal
interphalangeal joint. The tendons were then cut from their insertion
on the distal phalanges, and each finger was amputated at the proximal
interphalangeal joint.
Next, the skin on the ventral surface of the right forelimb was opened
with a single incision extending from antecubital fossa to the volar
aspect of the wrist. Exposed tissues were kept moist with warmed
Tyrode's solution (Sigma, St. Louis, MO). The tendons of flexor carpi
radialis (FCR), palmaris longus (PL), and flexor digitorum
superficialis (FDS) were severed at the wrist; these muscles were
dissected proximally, exposing the median nerve just deep to FDS. The
median nerve then was followed proximally. Branches of the median nerve
innervating FCR, PL, FDS, FDP, and pronator teres (PT), as well as the
anterior interosseous nerve (AIN), were dissected and identified with
electrical stimulation. For purposes of nerve branch identification,
electrical stimuli consisted of biphasic 50-200 µsec pulses
of 5-5000 µA at 1 Hz produced by a battery-powered optically
isolated stimulator (Bak BSI-1; Bak Electronics, Germantown, MD) and
were delivered via a bipolar pair of hook electrodes spaced 2.5-5 mm
apart. Nerve branches not contributing innervation to FDP were cut,
denervating all other forearm muscles innervated by the median nerve.
However, the AIN, which innervates pronator quadratus, was left intact. FCR, PL, and FDS were dissected to their origins and removed. PT was
divided, exposing the median nerve trunk beneath. The ulnar nerve was
dissected in a similar manner, and branches innervating flexor carpi
ulnaris (FCU) and FDP were identified with stimulation. Ulnar nerve
branches innervating FCU were cut, although the muscle was left
in situ. Finally, the median and ulnar nerves were cut just
proximal to the wrist, denervating the intrinsic hand muscles.
Bone screws then were placed in the distal radius, in the olecranon
process of the ulna, and in some experiments in the distal ulna as
well. The monkey was placed in a right lateral decubitus position, with
the shoulder protracted ~120° and the elbow extended ~120°. Via
the bone screws, the forearm was then mounted rigidly, ventral side up,
on an underlying frame. The skin flaps were used to construct a pool
that was filled with warm mineral oil to protect the exposed nerves and
muscles. Note that this preparation left the tissues of the carpal
tunnel and palm intact (Fig. 1) to
preserve any biomechanical effects of these tissues on tension
distribution among the FDP tendons.

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Figure 1.
Experimental setup. Each of the five digital
tendons of FDP was tied to a separate, independently positioned tension
transducer, served by its own signal conditioner channel. Tissues of
the palm and carpal tunnel were not dissected so that biomechanical
interconnections here would be as close as possible to those in the
intact animal. Bone screws placed in the distal radius, distal ulna,
and proximal ulna fixed the forearm to an underlying frame, and a
horizontal bar supported the metacarpus against gravity. Superficial
forearm flexor muscles were dissected and removed, exposing the belly
of FDP and its nerve supply. A protective oil pool was constructed with
the skin flaps. Each primary nerve branch in turn was then elevated
into the oil pool on a bipolar hook electrode for stimulation.
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The suture in each tendon then was tied to a separate tension
transducer (Load Cell BG-1000 gm; Kulite Semiconductor Products, Inc.,
Leonia, NJ) mounted on a custom-made miniature rack and pinion
that permitted adjustment of resting tendon length (Fig. 1). All five
transducers were positioned such that the resting tension was ~100 gm
in each tendon. The signal from each transducer was passed through a
conditioner (model 1902; Cambridge Electronic Design, Cambridge, UK)
that permitted gain switching between 10×, 30×, and 300×. Each
amplified signal was digitized at 2 kHz (micro1401; Cambridge
Electronic Design) and stored to disk using Spike2 software (Cambridge
Electronic Design) run on a computer (Gateway, San Diego, CA). Over the
0-1500 gm range typically used, the system provided a resolution of
0.4 gm/bit.
In four experiments, compound muscle action potentials (CMAPs) were
recorded via bipolar electrodes with closely spaced (0.15 mm) tips made
from twisted pairs of Teflon-insulated, stainless steel wires cut
across immediately before implantation in the muscle (Schieber, 1993
,
1995
). The tips of each bipolar pair were inserted together retrograde
2-3 mm into a 22 gauge hypodermic needle, the wires were bent back
parallel to the needle, and the needle was thrust into the muscle belly
and withdrawn, leaving the bipolar wire pair hooked in the muscle. Such
electrodes were implanted into the muscle belly of FDP at seven
locations (Fig. 2): proximal,
intermediate, and distal along the ulnar side of the muscle; proximal,
intermediate, and distal along the radial side of the muscle; and in
the superficial accessory head. EMG signals from the electrodes were
amplified 1000-5000× (Grass P511; Grass Instruments, West Warwick,
RI) and filtered (bandpass 100 Hz to 3 kHz), digitized at 4 kHz, and
recorded to disk in parallel with tension records from the tension
transducers. Selected channels were monitored on an analog
oscilloscope.

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Figure 2.
Standard map of FDP. This drawing of the
superficial aspect of FDP, as if dissected free from the rest of the
right forearm and hand, indicates the four neuromuscular regions of the
muscle: r, radial region, FDPr; u, ulnar
region, FDPu; a, accessory region, FDPa;
pu, proximal ulnar region, FDPpu. Whereas the first
three regions are innervated by primary nerve branches arising from the
median nerve trunk, the latter typically is innervated by a branch from
the ulnar nerve. The course of each nerve branch after penetrating the
muscle belly is indicated by a string of symbols: ,
FDPr; , FDPu; , FDPa; and , FDPpu. The locations of electrodes
inserted to record compound muscle action potentials are indicated by
: rd, radial distal; ri, radial
intermediate; rp, radial proximal; a,
accessory; ud, ulnar distal; ui, ulnar
intermediate; up, ulnar proximal. The proximal insertion
aponeurosis is indicated by stippling, with longitudinal
furrows in the aponeurosis shown as horizontal black
lines. a-l indicate the locations at which
suture loops were tied for passive loading. A bracket
indicates the portion of the insertion tendon that lies in the carpal
tunnel. The digital insertion tendons on the thumb through the little
finger are labeled t1 through t5,
respectively.
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Data collection. Each primary nerve branch innervating FDP
was placed in turn on a bipolar hook electrode, elevated into the mineral oil pool, and stimulated with 50 µsec biphasic, constant current pulses at 1 Hz. Stimulating current was slowly increased from
ineffective levels until each pulse produced a just detectable twitch
in one or more tension records; a visible twitch of the muscle belly
usually became detectable simultaneously. The current required to
produce a just detectable twitch was recorded as threshold current. The
stimulus current then was increased further until additional increments
of current produced no additional increase in tension; this was
recorded as the current for maximal contraction. A recording of tension
on each tendon and EMG activity from each intramuscular electrode was
then made as supramaximal stimuli (2× current for maximal contraction)
were delivered for 10 sec at 1 Hz, followed by 1 sec episodes of
tetanic stimulation at 5, 10, 20, and 40 Hz, with 10 sec between each
stimulus train. Once the tension produced by stimulation of each
primary nerve branch had been recorded, the median and ulnar nerves
both were cut in the upper arm, eliminating any spinal reflex
contribution to tension distribution, and each primary nerve branch was
stimulated again in turn. Thereafter, each primary nerve branch was cut
proximally from the median or ulnar nerve, eliminating any contribution
to tension distribution from axon collaterals, and each primary nerve branch was stimulated again.
To exclude the possibility that the AIN contributed innervation to the
midportion of FDP, we stimulated the AIN in each animal with the same
protocol used to study the primary nerve branches of FDP. AIN
stimulation never produced appreciable tension in the FDP tendons,
however. Therefore, we confirmed in each experiment that the AIN does
not contribute to innervation of FDP and have not included data from
AIN stimulation in our analyses below.
After recording the distribution of active tension to different FDP
tendons produced by stimulating each primary nerve branch, we recorded
the distribution of tension produced passively by pulling at different
radioulnar locations on the FDP tendon just proximal to the wrist. At
this level, the muscular portion of the FDP belly is ending, but the
FDP insertion tendon still consists of a superficial aponeurosis not
yet divided into separate tendons for each digit, which ultimately
occurs within the palm (Serlin and Schieber, 1993
). Proximal to the
wrist, a distinct central furrow typically can be identified separating
the radial and ulnar portions of the insertion aponeurosis, and the
ulnar portion typically has a second, less distinct furrow separating
an intermediate and a more ulnar longitudinal condensation of
aponeurotic tissue. We placed four separate figure-of-eight suture
loops at different radioulnar locations in the FDP insertion
aponeurosis just proximal to the wrist, typically placing two suture
loops in the radial portion of the tendon and two in the ulnar portion,
with one in the intermediate and another in the most ulnar
condensation. Each of the four suture loops in turn was connected to a
1 kg weight suspended proximal to the elbow via a suture run over a
pulley, such that the direction of pull exerted by the weight on the
tendon was as close as possible to the long axis of the forearm. The tension in all five digital tendons was then recorded as the 1 kg
weight was raised and lowered by hand from beneath to examine the
distribution of tension produced passively by mechanical
interconnections among the more distal tendons and other soft tissues
in the palm. At the end of all studies, the monkey was killed
with a lethal injection of thiopental.
Data analysis. Data files were reviewed off-line with
software that displayed the recorded tension waveforms graphically and permitted time and amplitude measurements to be made either with a
mouse-controlled cursor or with a script routine that exported values
to text files (Spike2; Cambridge Electronic Design). Additional analyses of exported data were performed on a minicomputer using Excel
97 (Microsoft, Seattle, WA) and SPSS (SPSS, Inc., Chicago, IL) software.
To examine the distribution of tension across the five tendons of FDP,
we measured changes in tension on each tendon for single twitches and
for 5, 10, 20, and 40 Hz tetani delivered to each primary nerve branch.
Average tension was measured over a 1000 msec window beginning at each
stimulus train onset, and from these values the average tension in a
500 msec baseline period immediately preceding stimulus onset was subtracted.
These tension measurements were used to calculate two indexes
quantifying how the neuromuscular compartment innervated by each
primary nerve branch distributed tension among the digital insertion
tendons of FDP (Fritz et al., 1992
; Schieber et al., 1997
). Computation
of these indexes is simplified by normalizing the tension in each
tendon as a fraction of the total tension exerted on all
tendons:
where
i is the fraction
tension change in the ith tendon of a muscle,
Ti is the absolute tension change, and
n is the number of tendons.
The output index (OPI) quantifies the center of effort of the
contraction from
1 to +1, with
1 representing all tension exerted
on the most radial tendon, 0 representing tension distributed symmetrically about the center, and +1 representing all tension exerted
on the most ulnar tendon. The OPI is calculated as:
where
i is the fraction of
the total tension exerted on the ith tendon, n is
the number of tendons, and wi is a
constant that provides a rank-ordered weighting of the tendons:
The selectivity index (SEL) quantifies the degree to which
tension is focused on only one tendon versus being spread across multiple tendons, independent of which particular tendons receive what
fractions of the total tension. The fractional tensions of an ideally
unselective compartment that exerted equal tension on all tendons of a
muscle would be
u = 1/n, whereas the fractional tensions of an ideally selective
compartment that exerted tension on only one tendon, t1 for example,
would be
1 = 1,
2 = 0, ... .
n = 0. In an
n-dimensional fractional tension space, the linear distance
between these two points would be:
The linear distance, d, between the point
representing any other compartment and the ideally unselective
compartment would be:
The SEL is then calculated as
SEL will vary from 0 for an ideally unselective compartment to 1 for an ideally selective compartment.
 |
RESULTS |
Innervation of the four regions of FDP
Previous anatomical studies have shown that the macaque FDP
receives four primary nerve branches, each innervating a separate region of the muscle belly (Serlin and Schieber, 1993
; Maurer et al.,
1995
). As illustrated schematically in Figure 2, the large radial
(FDPr) and ulnar (FDPu) regions each receive a primary branch from the
median nerve. A smaller accessory region (FDPa), located proximal and
superficial to the radial region, is also innervated by a median nerve
branch. The most proximal portion of the ulnar head (FDPpu), however,
is usually innervated by a branch from the ulnar nerve.
In the present experiments, two of the five animals showed atypical
innervation of region FDPpu. In one, the proximal ulnar region was
innervated by two nerve branches: a typical nerve branch arising from
the ulnar nerve was unusually small, and an atypical branch from the
median nerve also innervated the proximal ulnar region of FDP in this
animal. Stimulation of this atypical median nerve branch produced a
pattern of EMG activation and a distribution of tension characteristic
of region FDPpu in the three animals with typical innervation (see
below), whereas stimulation of the typical but small branch from the
ulnar nerve did not produce appreciable tension. Therefore, we included
the data from stimulation of the atypical median nerve branch in our
analyses of region FDPpu below. In the second animal with atypical
innervation, we could find no primary nerve branch innervating the
proximal ulnar region, and no data for FDPpu were collected in this
experiment. Therefore, our analyses of FDPpu below were based on data
from only four animals (three in which a typical branch from the ulnar nerve innervated region FDPpu and one in which this region received an
atypical primary nerve branch from the median nerve).
In our previous anatomical studies of the macaque FDP, each primary
nerve branch appeared to enter a separate region of muscle fibers, with
little evidence that nerve fibers crossed into another region after
entering the muscle. To examine physiologically whether excitation
produced by stimulation of each nerve branch was confined to the
expected region of FDP, in four of the present experiments we recorded
CMAPs from bipolar intramuscular electrodes inserted at seven sites in
the FDP muscle belly (Fig. 2,
). Figure
3A shows examples of the CMAPs
recorded at all seven sites after stimulation of each primary nerve
branch in one experiment. For analysis, the average level of rectified
EMG activity from 6 to 25 msec after stimulus onset was normalized for
maximum activity at each electrode location. Figure 3B shows
normalized EMG activity from each electrode averaged across these four
experiments. After stimulation of the nerve branch to FDPr, electrodes
inserted at proximal (rp), intermediate (ri), and
distal (rd) locations on the radial side of FDP recorded
activity, whereas little or no activity was recorded by other
electrodes. Stimulation of the FDPa nerve branch resulted in EMG
activity confined to the FDPa electrode (a). Stimulation of
the FDPu nerve branch produced EMG activity chiefly in the distal
(ud) and intermediate (ui) electrodes on the
ulnar side of the muscle, with somewhat less activity recorded in the
proximal ulnar electrode (up). Conversely, stimulation of
the FDPpu nerve branch evoked EMG activity chiefly in the proximal ulnar electrode with less in the intermediate ulnar electrode. Although
the boundary between the FDPu and FDPpu regions thus may be indistinct,
stimulation of each primary nerve branch produced electrical activation
of the appropriate region of the FDP muscle belly, with little evidence
of activity in other regions.

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Figure 3.
Electromyographic localization.
A, Compound muscle action potentials recorded
simultaneously by intramuscular electrodes at each of the seven
locations (rd through up), as indicated
in Figure 2, are shown after a single supramaximal stimulation pulse in
a 1 Hz train delivered to each primary nerve branch in turn (FDPr,
FDPu, FDPa, or FDPpu) in a single experiment. The amplification of each
channel was constant throughout, and the vertical scale represents ±5
V for each channel. The stimulation pulse was delivered to each nerve
branch at the time indicated by the arrows at the
bottom. B, The amplitude of the
compound muscle action potentials recorded by a given electrode during
stimulation of each primary nerve branch was normalized from 0 to 1 in
each experiment, and these normalized values were averaged across
experiments. Lines connect the points
representing the mean ± SD normalized EMG responses recorded from
each of the seven intramuscular electrodes during stimulation of a
given nerve branch. Abbreviations for electrode locations are as
described in the legend to Figure 2. Stimulation of each primary nerve
branch evoked compound muscle action potentials localized to the
appropriate region of the muscle. For most points, the SD error bars
fell inside the symbol representing the mean. Normalized
EMG amplitude was most variable near the ulnar proximal and ulnar
intermediate electrodes, consistent with the variable innervation of
region FDPpu found in these monkeys.
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Effects of stimulation frequency
Stimulation of a given primary nerve branch produced different
amounts of tension on the five digital tendons of FDP. Figure 4A shows, for example,
the raw data record from stimulation of the FDPr nerve branch in one
experiment. Stimulation at 1, 5, and 10 Hz produced unfused twitches,
whereas progressive temporal summation produced successively greater
tensions at 20 and 40 Hz. For all frequencies of stimulation, the
greatest amount of tension was exerted on tendon 3 and the least amount
on tendon 5. Figure 4B shows the 1 sec mean tensions
exerted on each FDP tendon measured from these data as a function of
stimulation frequency. Because twitches did not summate at frequencies
up to 10 Hz, mean tension increased linearly in each tendon from 1 to
10 Hz. Tension increased more rapidly from 10 to 20 Hz, as twitches
temporally summated, with a relatively slower additional increase from
20 to 40 Hz. At all frequencies of stimulation, however, the rank order
from the tendon receiving the most tension to the tendon receiving the
least tension remained constant (t3 > t2 > t4 > t1 > t5). Furthermore, the ratios of tension exerted on different tendons remained relatively constant as well.

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Figure 4.
Effects of stimulation frequency.
A, An original recording shows tension in each FDP
tendon during stimulation of an FDPr primary nerve branch at 1, 5, 10, 20, and 40 Hz. The vertical scale representing 0-1500 gm is the same
for each digital tendon, t1 through t5.
B, Mean tension (over 1 sec) in each tendon has been
plotted as a function of stimulation frequency. Data are from the
record shown in A. C, SEL and OPI indexes
calculated from the same data are plotted against one another for each
stimulus frequency to demonstrate that the distribution of tension
among the five tendons of FDP did not vary with stimulation
frequency.
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We also evaluated the degree to which tension distribution varied with
stimulus frequency by calculating the SEL and OPI at each stimulation
frequency. The SEL will be 1 if all tension is exerted on a single
tendon and 0 if tension is evenly distributed across all tendons. The
OPI describes the center of effort of the tension from
1 for the most
radial tendon to +1 for the most ulnar tendon. The SEL and OPI
indexes for the data shown in Figure 4, A and
B, are plotted against one another in Figure 4C.
At all stimulation frequencies, SEL clustered at low values from 0.30 to 0.35, indicating that the tension was distributed across multiple tendons. The OPI also remained relatively constant at approximately
0.1 for each frequency, demonstrating that the tension maintained the
same center of effort, slightly radial to t3. In general, the SEL and
OPI remained relatively constant for stimulation of a given nerve
branch at different frequencies. Because the distribution of tension
thus remained relatively constant at all stimulus frequencies, because
20 Hz represents a relatively high physiological discharge frequency
and because 40 Hz stimulation occasionally produced tensions large
enough to saturate our transducers, we chose tensions exerted during 20 Hz stimulation to characterize the distribution of tension across the
five tendons in the following analyses.
Tension distribution by the different regions of FDP
Contraction of each region of FDP produced a different
distribution of tension among the tendons. Although the absolute
tension exerted on a given tendon varied between animals in relation to animal size, the relative distribution of tension among the tendons produced by a given region tended to be similar from monkey to monkey.
Figure 5A shows the
distribution of 1 sec mean tension during 20 Hz stimulation of each
region (FDPr, FDPu, FDPa, and FDPpu) averaged across monkeys.
Contraction of FDPr resulted in the greatest amount of tension on
tendons 2 and 3, with less tension on tendons 1 and 4 and little if any
tension on tendon 5. FDPu produced the greatest tension on tendons 4 and 5, less on tendons 1 and 3, and very little on tendon 2. FDPa
produced tension on tendon 2, less on tendon 3, and very little on
tendon 1; the tension produced by FDPa on tendons 2 and 3 was always
less than that produced by FDPr in the same animal. FDPpu produced more
tension on tendon 5 than tendon 4, although in all cases the tension
was less than that produced by FDPu. Each region of FDP thus produced a
distinct and characteristic distribution of tension across the tendons.
The two larger regions of FDP (FDPr and FDPu) produced quantitatively
more tension than the two smaller regions (FDPa and FDPpu). The tension
produced by the two smaller regions, however, was somewhat more
selective than that produced by the two larger regions.

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Figure 5.
Tension distribution by the different regions of
FDP. A, Plots of the tension exerted on each digital
tendon during 20 Hz stimulation of each primary nerve branch. Values
are the average across subjects with SD error bars. B,
The SEL and OPI indexes calculated for the tension distribution
produced by 20 Hz stimulation of each primary nerve branch in each
experiment have been plotted against one another. (Note that, because
of atypical innervation in one animal, only 4 points were available for
FDPpu. Only 4 points were available for FDPu because stimulation of
this nerve branch inadvertently was omitted at this stage in one
experiment.) The same plot shows SEL versus OPI for passive loading at
each location tested on the proximal insertion aponeurosis (Fig.
7).
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We examined these differences among the regions of FDP further using
the OPI and SEL. These indexes for each region in each experiment are
plotted against one another in Figure 5B. Each region tended
to have its center of effort at a different radioulnar location. FDPa
had the most radial OPI (mean of
0.36). FDPr had a less radial OPI
(mean of
0.21). FDPpu had the most ulnar OPI (mean of +0.4), whereas
the OPI of FDPu was less ulnar (mean of +0.26). The regions of FDP also
differed in their selectivity, with the smaller regions exerting
tension more selectively on particular tendons (mean SEL for FDPa and
FDPpu, 0.56 and 0.45, respectively) than the larger regions (mean
SEL for FDPr and FDPu, 0.35 and 0.26, respectively). The smaller
regions of FDP thus exerted tension somewhat selectively on the radial
(FDPa) or ulnar (FDPpu) tendons, whereas the larger regions, although
producing quantitatively more tension, distributed their tension rather broadly over the more radial (FDPr) or ulnar (FDPu) tendons.
Although our sample size was small (n = 5 for FDPr and
FDPa; n = 4 for FDPu and FDPpu), we performed
multivariate ANOVA on the OPI and SEL values, confirming significant
variation in these indexes by neuromuscular region
(p < 0.01). Contrasts performed for each region
against the others showed that, whereas the OPIs of the two more radial
regions (FDPr and FDPa) were not significantly different and the OPIs
of the two more ulnar regions (FDPu and FDPpu) were not significantly
different, the OPIs of FDPr and FDPa each were significantly different
from the OPIs of FDPu and FDPpu (p < 0.008;
Bonferroni corrected value). Contrasts also demonstrated that,
whereas SEL values for FDPpu did not differ significantly from other
regions, SEL values for FDPa were significantly higher than SEL
values for the two larger regions, FDPr and FDPu (p < 0.008).
Contributions of passive biomechanical interconnections to
tension distribution
The FDP tendons to different digits are heavily interconnected
from the muscle belly distally to the base of the digits. Most muscle
fibers of the macaque FDP insert from below into a sheet-like aponeurosis on the superficial aspect of the muscle belly; only fibers
of region FDPa insert from above (Serlin and Schieber, 1993
). By the
level of the carpal tunnel, this aponeurosis has developed longitudinal
furrows (Fig. 2), but clearly separate tendons to the different digits
do not arise until the level of the palm. Within the palm, the tendon
to digit 2 comes from the radial aspect of the tendon sheet, the
tendons to digits 5 and 4 come from the ulnar aspect, the tendon to
digit 3 arises from both radial and ulnar bands on the deep surface,
and the tendon to digit 1 arises from the central portion of the
superficial aspect. These biomechanical interconnections among the FDP
tendons can cause tension exerted at one point on the proximal
insertion aponeurosis to be distributed among multiple distal finger tendons.
In three monkeys, we examined the extent to which these
interconnections contribute to the tension distribution by applying a 1 kg load to the proximal insertion aponeurosis at four different radioulnar locations just proximal to the carpal tunnel. Each point to
which the load was attached was marked on our standard drawing of FDP
(Fig. 2, a-l). Figure
6A shows the tension in
each distal tendon recorded simultaneously as a 1 kg weight raised and
lowered by hand was used to gradually load and unload one point in the
proximal insertion aponeurosis (Fig. 2, point l). At
any time in this recording, the greatest tension was transmitted to
tendon 2 and the least to tendons 4 and 5. In Figure
6B, these same data have been used to plot tension in
a given tendon as a function of the total tension in all five tendons.
As illustrated by this example, such plots tended to be quite linear,
with little hysteresis during loading versus unloading. Therefore, we
used the slope of these linear relationships to quantify the proportion of total tension passively distributed by biomechanical
interconnections from proximal points in the insertion aponeurosis to
each digital tendon.

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Figure 6.
Passive loading of the proximal insertion
aponeurosis. A, An original record shows the
simultaneous tension in all five distal tendons as a 1 kg weight was
lowered ( ) and raised ( ) by hand, alternately applying and
removing a proximally directed load to the proximal insertion
aponeurosis of FDP at point l in Figure 2. The vertical
scale represents 0-400 gm for each tendon. B, The data
from A have been plotted as a function of the
instantaneous total tension in all five tendons. The linear
relationships indicate that a constant fraction of the total passive
load on the proximal insertion aponeurosis was distributed to each
distal insertion tendon.
|
|
Figure 7A shows the normalized
distribution of tension produced by passive loading at each of the 12 points marked by letters a-l in Figure 2. Here each value
is the slope of the single tendon versus the total tension relationship
described above, equivalent to the fraction of the total tension summed
across the five tendons. At only one point from one experiment was
virtually all of the tension exerted at a proximal point near the
radial edge of the proximal insertion aponeurosis (k)
transmitted to a single distal tendon (t2). In all other cases, tension
was distributed passively to multiple digital tendons. Nevertheless,
each distribution had a relatively sharp peak, indicating that tension
was distributed somewhat selectively to a particular digital tendon. As
the point of loading moved progressively from radial to ulnar, the
digital tendon receiving the greatest tension shifted stepwise from t2 to t5, and the overall OPI shifted progressively from more negative to
more positive values (Fig. 7B). No broad peaks spanning two or more digits were observed with passive loading, however, indicating that despite their biomechanical interconnections, different radioulnar points on the proximal insertion aponeurosis transmit approximately half of the tension exerted at that point to a particular digital tendon.

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Figure 7.
Tension distributions from passive loading versus
active contraction. A, The distribution of tension,
normalized such that the total on all five digits equals 1, has been
plotted for each passive loading site. The SEL and OPI indexes for each
of these distributions are shown in Figure 5B (+).
B, As the site of passive loading gradually shifted from
more ulnar (a) to more radial
(l), the OPI appropriately shifted from more
ulnar (positive) to more radial (negative) values. C,
The normalized tension distributions from stimulation of each primary
nerve branch in each experiment have been plotted for comparison with
the normalized tension distributions from passive loading in
A. The underlying data are the same as for Figure 5.
Note that these distributions for active contraction of regions FDPr
( ) and FDPu ( ) are broader (less selective) than those for any
point under passive load, as also indicated by the low SEL values in
Figure 5B.
|
|
The relatively sharply peaked tension distributions produced by passive
loading of the proximal insertion aponeurosis contrasted with the
relatively broader tension distributions produced by active contraction
of different regions of FDP, particularly FDPr and FDPu (Fig. 5). To
compare these passive versus active tension distributions more
directly, we normalized the tension produced by stimulation of each
primary nerve branch in each experiment as a fraction of the total
tension (first equation in Materials and Methods) and plotted these
normalized active tension distributions in Figure 7C. The
normalized active tension distributions of FDPa and FDPpu were rather
selective for t2 and t5, respectively, and closely resembled the
tension distributions produced by passive loading at the far radial and
far ulnar aspects of the proximal insertion aponeurosis, respectively.
In contrast, the normalized tension distributions produced by active
contraction of FDPr or FDPu had less selective, broader peaks that
spanned two or three adjacent digital tendons, unlike any seen with
passive loading of a single point on the proximal insertion aponeurosis.
To examine these comparisons quantitatively, we computed the SEL and
OPI for each tension distribution produced by passive loading (Fig.
7A) and plotted them against one another along with those
for active contraction of each region (Fig. 7C) in Figure 5B. The SEL and OPI values produced by active contraction of
FDPa were comparable with those produced by passive loading at the most
radial aspect of the proximal insertion aponeurosis (except for passive
loading at point k that produced tension only on t2, with
OPI equaling
0.48 and SEL equaling 1.01), suggesting that FDPa
exerted active force at this location, which then was passively distributed chiefly to t2. The SEL and OPI of FDPpu were comparable with those produced by passive loading at the most ulnar aspect of the
proximal insertion aponeurosis, suggesting that FDPpu exerted active
force at this location, which then was passively distributed chiefly to
t5. In contrast, the SEL of FDPr tended to be slightly lower than that
produced by passive loading with similar OPIs, and the SEL of FDPu
tended to be considerably lower. These observations indicate that FDPr
and FDPu each exert active tension at multiple radioulnar locations on
the proximal insertion aponeurosis, consistent with the anatomical
arrangement of their muscle fibers. The broad distribution of tension
produced by contraction of FDPr or FDPu thus resulted both from active
distribution of tension to multiple radioulnar locations across the
proximal insertion aponeurosis and from passive distribution of this
active tension through biomechanical interconnections between the tendons.
Excluding effects of spinal reflexes and axon reflexes
Electrical stimulation of a given primary nerve branch will excite
both motor and sensory axons. Although discharge of the motor axons
will cause the stimulated region to contract directly, centrally
propagating discharge of sensory axons might elicit additional
contraction through spinal reflexes. If sensory axons from one region
of FDP have reflex effects on motoneurons innervating another region,
then the distribution of active tension measured during stimulation of
one primary nerve branch might represent both direct contraction of one
region and reflex-induced contraction of another. Such spinal reflexes
might play a role in tension distribution in the normal, behaving
animal. To evaluate any contribution of spinal reflexes, we therefore
repeated stimulation of each primary nerve branch in three monkeys
after cutting the median and ulnar nerves in the upper arm, eliminating
any possibility of spinal reflexes. Figure
8A shows that, after
proximal ligation of the median and ulnar nerves, stimulation of each
nerve branch produced a tension distribution that was quite similar to
that observed before ligation (Fig. 5A). The greatest amount
of tension from stimulation of the FDPr nerve branch was on tendons 2 and 3, with less tension on tendons 1 and 4 and little or no tension on
tendon 5. FDPu stimulation produced most tension on tendons 4 and 5, less tension on tendons 1 and 3, and the least tension on tendon 2. FDPa stimulation produced tension on tendon 2 and less on tendon 3. FDPpu produced tension on tendons 4 and 5. SEL and OPI values for each
region were also similar to those observed before proximal nerve
ligation (Fig. 8B). The similarity of tension distributions before and after proximal ligation of the median and
ulnar nerves indicates that spinal reflexes did not cause appreciable
contraction in additional neuromuscular regions that might have
broadened the observed tension distributions.

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Figure 8.
Tension distributions after eliminating spinal
reflexes. A, Plots of the tension exerted on each tendon
during 20 Hz stimulation of each primary nerve branch after cutting the
median and ulnar nerve trunks in the upper arm. Values are the average
across subjects (n = 3) with SD error bars.
B, The SEL and OPI indexes calculated for the tension
distribution produced by 20 Hz stimulation of each primary nerve branch
in each experiment have been plotted against one another. (Note that,
because FDPpu received atypical innervation in 1 of the 3 monkeys
studied here, only 2 points were available for this region.)
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|
Motor axons commonly are assumed to ramify to innervate multiple muscle
fibers only after the axon has entered the muscle. However, we
wanted to exclude the possibility that axons innervating FDP give off
collaterals in the parent median nerve, such that collaterals of the
same axon might enter more than one primary nerve branch. Stimulating
one primary nerve branch then would cause, via axon reflexes,
contraction in more than one region, thereby producing a broader
distribution of tension. Therefore, we stimulated each primary nerve
branch in three monkeys a third time, after the branch had been
cut away from the median or ulnar nerve trunk, eliminating any possible
contribution to tension distribution of extramuscular axonal branching.
The tension distribution observed for each region of FDP again was
similar to that observed before cutting each primary nerve branch off
of the parent nerve trunks, as well as before cutting the median and
ulnar nerves in the upper arm (Fig.
9A). SEL and OPI values for
each region also were similar (Fig. 9B). Axon reflexes thus
did not contribute appreciably to the distribution of tension produced
by contraction of the regions of FDP.

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Figure 9.
Tension distributions after eliminating axon
reflexes. A, Plots of the tension exerted on each tendon
during 20 Hz stimulation of each primary nerve branch after cutting the
branch off its nerve trunk. Values are the average across subjects
(n = 3) with SD error bars. B, The
SEL and OPI indexes calculated for the tension distribution produced by
20 Hz stimulation of each primary nerve branch in each experiment have
been plotted against one another. (Note that, because FDPpu received
atypical innervation in 1 of the 3 monkeys studied here, and in another
the FDPpu nerve branch failed to conduct after being cutoff the ulnar
nerve trunk, only 1 point was available for this region.)
|
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 |
DISCUSSION |
Factors distributing tension to multiple digits
Our results show that none of the four neuromuscular regions of
the macaque FDP exerts tension on only one digit. Each region does
distribute tension across the digits in a distinct pattern, however.
The two largest regions (FDPr and FDPu) show the broadest tension
distributions. FDPr exerts most of its tension on digits 2 and 3, but
also exerts considerable tension on digits 1 and 4; FDPu exerts most of
its tension on digits 4 and 5, but also exerts considerable tension on
digits 1 and 3. The action of FDPr on digit 4 and the action of FDPu on
digit 1, although consistent with the anatomic structure of the FDP
tendon sheet (Serlin and Schieber, 1993
), could not have been predicted
from our previous EMG and modeling studies (Schieber, 1993
, 1995
). The
two smaller regions (FDPa and FDPpu) each distribute their tension more
selectively. FDPa exerts most of its tension on digit 2, but also
exerts some tension on digits 1 and 3; FDPu exerts most of its tension
on digit 5, but also exerts some tension on digits 1 and 4.
In large part, the distribution of tension to multiple digits by each
region of the macaque FDP results from the complex, heavily
interconnected structure of its tendons of insertion. Passive loading
at different radioulnar points on the proximal portion of this tendon
sheet always produced maximal tension on one distal finger tendon, with
lesser degrees of tension on other, adjacent tendons. In most cases,
some tension also was transmitted to the thumb. Indeed, the patterns of
tension distribution produced by passive loading at the radial or ulnar
edge of the proximal insertion aponeurosis closely resembled those
produced by active contraction of FDPa or FDPpu, respectively,
suggesting that these two regions exert their respective active
tensions primarily at the radial or ulnar edges of the proximal
insertion aponeurosis, and that tension then is distributed to multiple
digits passively through the biomechanical interconnections of the tendons.
The two larger regions (FDPr and FDPu) each distributed their tension
more broadly than could be attributed to passive mechanical distribution of tension from a single point on the proximal insertion aponeurosis. Although these broader tension distributions most likely
reflect the insertion of FDPr and FDPu muscle fibers on more extensive
radioulnar portions of the proximal insertion aponeurosis, we
considered two alternative explanations. First, although the reflex
connections of afferents typically are partitioned to affect motoneurons of the compartment from which the afferent originated (Windhorst et al., 1989
), Ia
afferents from a given region of the feline biceps femoris or FDP have
been shown to make additional connections to motoneurons of other
regions of the same muscle (Botterman et al., 1983
; Fritz et al.,
1989
). Therefore, we considered the possibility that, if afferent axons
were stimulated along with motor axons in a given primary nerve branch,
spinal reflexes might result in contraction of other regions of FDP,
broadening the distribution of recorded tension. We consistently found,
however, that the tension distribution remained unchanged after the
median and ulnar nerves were cut proximally to eliminate any effects of
spinal reflexes. Second, we considered the possibility that motor axons
might bifurcate proximal to formation of the primary nerve branches
from the median nerve, such that branches of the same motor axons might
enter more than one primary nerve branch. Then axon reflexes might
result in contraction in more than one region after stimulation of a
single primary nerve branch. We found, however, that tension
distributions did not change when each primary nerve branch was cut off
the median or ulnar nerve trunk to eliminate any axon reflexes.
Therefore, we conclude that the broad tension distributions produced by
contraction of FDPr or FDPu result in part from the fact that each of
these regions exerts active tension on a broad portion of the proximal
insertion aponeurosis.
Compartmentalization of FDP
The macaque FDP shows many characteristics of a compartmentalized
muscle. Each region of the macaque FDP is innervated by a primary nerve
branch. Although glycogen depletion studies have yet to be performed on
this muscle, the present EMG recordings indicate that the vast majority
of the muscle fibers innervated by axons in each primary nerve branch
are localized within the appropriate region. In microdissection, a
clear border can be defined between FDPr and FDPu, with fascicles of
FDPr arising radial to the anterior interosseous nerve and fascicles of
FDPu arising ulnar to the nerve (Serlin and Schieber, 1993
). The
superficial insertion aponeurosis separates FDPa from the rest of the
muscle. A clear anatomical border between regions FDPpu and FDPu is not evident on microdissection, and in the present study the compound muscle action potentials evoked by stimulation of the FDPpu and FDPu
primary nerve branches were not sharply localized. Therefore, this
border might be represented by interdigitated fascicles of the two
adjacent regions. Our previous EMG recordings from FDPr and FDPu in
awake behaving monkeys indicate that these two regions each can be
activated independently of one another, whereas EMG recordings from
FDPa and FDPpu have yet to be obtained (Schieber, 1993
, 1995
). Many
features of the macaque FDP thus indicate that its four regions are in
fact separate neuromuscular compartments.
Compartmentalization often is most apparent in muscles with spatially
distributed origins and/or insertions. Although the different
compartments of such a muscle typically have similar histochemical
fiber-type composition, their different origins and/or insertions give
contraction of each compartment a different biomechanical effect
(Chanaud et al., 1991
). Similarly, the macaque FDP has a distributed
origin (from the internal aspects of both the radius and the ulna, from
the interosseous membrane, and from the medial epicondyle of the
humerus), as well as a spatially distributed insertion, with distal
tendons inserting separately on each digit. We have shown previously
that all four compartments of the macaque FDP have similar fiber-type
composition (Maurer et al., 1995
). The present results demonstrate that
contraction of each compartment also has a distinct mechanical effect,
producing a unique distribution of tension across the five tendons of
the muscle. None of these compartments exerts tension on only a single tendon, so none can produce motion of only a single digit.
Nevertheless, various levels of contraction in the different
compartments of FDP could be combined with the action of additional
finger muscles to produce more movement of one digit than the others,
as observed during individuated finger movements performed by awake
monkeys (Schieber, 1991
, 1995
).
 |
FOOTNOTES |
Received Oct. 20, 2000; revised Dec. 27, 2000; accepted Jan. 4, 2000.
This work was supported by Grant R01-NS36341 from the National
Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke. We thank Lee Anne
Schery for technical assistance and Marsha Hayles for editorial comments.
Correspondence should be addressed to Dr. Marc H. Schieber, University
of Rochester Medical Center, Department of Neurology, 601 Elmwood
Avenue, Box 673, Rochester, NY 14642. E-mail: mhs{at}cvs.rochester.edu.
 |
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Copyright © 2001 Society for Neuroscience 0270-6474/01/2162150-09$05.00/0
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