What the %PCSA? Addressing Diversity in Lower-Limb Musculoskeletal Models: Age- and Sex-related Differences in PCSA and Muscle Mass
R. Maarleveld, H.E.J. Veeger, F.C.T. van der Helm, J. Son, R.L. Lieber, E. van der Kruk

TL;DR
This study reviews and compares experimental data on muscle parameters like PCSA and muscle mass across different ages and sexes, revealing that current musculoskeletal models lack demographic-specific accuracy.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of demographic differences in muscle parameters and highlights the limitations of existing MSK models in representing these variations.
Findings
Males have higher muscle mass in rectus femoris and semimembranosus.
Females have greater relative muscle mass in pelvic and ankle muscles.
Current models do not accurately reflect age- and sex-specific muscle distributions.
Abstract
Musculoskeletal (MSK) models offer a non-invasive way to understand biomechanical loads on joints and tendons, which are difficult to measure directly. Variations in muscle strength, especially relative differences between muscles, significantly impact model outcomes. Typically, scaled generic MSK models use maximum isometric forces that are not adjusted for different demographics, raising concerns about their accuracy. This review provides an overview on experimentally derived strength parameters, including physiological cross-sectional area (PCSA), muscle mass (Mm), and relative muscle mass (%Mm), which is the relative distribution of muscle mass across the leg. We analysed differences by age and sex, and compared open-source lower limb MSK model parameters with experimental data from 57 studies. Our dataset, with records dating back to 1884, shows that uniformly increasing all…
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Taxonomy
TopicsMusicians’ Health and Performance · Orthopaedic implants and arthroplasty
