Guest guest Posted July 19, 2001 Report Share Posted July 19, 2001 Here are some extracts from an excellent summary of the history of biomechanics and kinesiology, together with some of my remarks on various sections. It is most interesting to see that some rather old myths and beliefs are still being proliferated despite their being either questioned or abandoned many decades ago. It seems as if some of our current 'gurus' would even have encountered some tough oppostion to their beliefs in those bygone times! ----------------------------------------------- History of Biomechanics and Kinesiology A. <http://www.usd.edu/~jarichar/HIST.html> The history of this science goes back to its definitional beginning. Kinesiology is a combination of the Greek for 'to move' (kinein) and 'logos' (discourse). Kinesiologists - those who discourse on movement - in effect combine anatomy, the science of structure of the body, with physiology, the science of function of the body, to produce kinesiology, the science of movement of the body. It is usually accepted that Aristotle (384-322 BC) is the ''Father of Kinesiology " . His treatises, PARTS OF ANIMALS, MOVEMENT OF ANIMALS, and PROGRESSION OF ANIMALS, described the actions of the muscles and subjected them to geometric analysis for the first time. He first to analyzed and described walking, in which rotatory motion is transformed into translatory motion. Further he discussed of the problems of pushing a boat under various conditions was, in essence, a precursor of Newton's three laws of motion...... Archimedes (287-212 BC), another Greek, determined hydrostatic principles governing floating bodies that are still accepted as swimming. In addition, Heath (1972) suggests that his inquiries included the laws of leverage and determining the center of gravity and the foundation of theoretical mechanics. Galen (131-201 AD) a Roman citizen who tended the Pergamum's gladiators in Asia Minor and is considered to have been the first team physician in history. He used number to describe muscles. His essay DE MOTU MUSCULORUM distinguished between motor and sensory nerves, agonist and antagonist muscles, described tonus, and introduced terms such as diarthrosis and synarthrosis. He taught that muscular contraction resulted from the passage of " animal spirits " from the brain through the nerves to the muscles. Snook (1978) suggested that some writers consider his treatise the first textbook on kinesiology, and he has been termed " the father of sports medicine. " Kinesiology and anatomy lay untouched from the mystical studies of Galen until the 15th century when Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) advanced them another step. This artist, engineer, and scientist, da Vinci, was particularly interested in the structure of the human body as it relates to performance, center of gravity and the balance and center of resistance. He used letter to identify muscles and nerves in the human body that he retrieved from grave yards in the middle of the night. He described the mechanics of the body during standing, walking up and downhill, rising from a sitting position, jumping, and human gait. To demonstrate the progressive action and interaction of various muscles during movement, he suggested that cords be attached to a skeleton at the points of origin and insertion of the muscles. For more information go to Leonardo da Vinci Galileo, the father of parabolic mathematics, also proved that the flight (trajectory) of a projectile through a non-resistant medium is a parabola. His work gave impetus to the study of mechanical events in mathematical terms, which in turn provided a basis for the emergence of kinesiology as a science. The Italian Jesuit Francesco Grimaldi was the first to report hearing sounds made by contracting muscles. Although his book, Physicomatheis de Itlmine, was published in 1663, 2 years after his death, techniques for studying these sounds were not available until 300 years later. In the last few years, the invention of the electronic stethoscope and computer analyses have made research in this field feasible. Oster has shown that the amplitude of muscle sound is directly proportionate to the weight used to maintain a constant contraction. These sounds appear to originate from the vibration of single muscle fibers, particularly the fast-twitch fibers. In the future it may be possible to use such sounds to determine which muscles are active in a given movement and how hard each is working.(Oster, 1984). [Mel Siff: Some of this work was reported in Scientific American in the early 1980s and about the same time I used equipment from our Linguistics Department and ultrasonic apparatus from the Obstetrics Dept to analyse muscle action and joint sounds, for example in cases of chondromalacia patellae.] The circulation of the blood through the. body was first demonstrated by Harvey (1578-1657), although he erroneously attributed to the heart the function of recharging the blood with heat and " vital spirit. " (Harvey, 1959). Subsequently, Niels Stensen (1648-1686) made the then-sensational declaration that the heart was merely a muscle, not the seat of " natural warmth, " nor of " vital spirit. " This has been acclaimed as the greatest advance in our knowledge of the circulatory system since Harvey's discovery (, 1914). Three years later, Stensen, who has been credited with laying the foundation of muscular mechanics, wrote Elementorum Myologiae Specium, an " epoch-making " book on muscular function. In this book he asserted that a muscle is essentially a collection of motor fibres; that in composition the centre of a muscle differs from the ends (tendons) and is the only part that contracts. Contraction of a muscle, wrote Stensen, is merely the shortening of its individual fibers and is not produced by an increase or loss of substance. (Ralton, 1926). The word " orthopaedics " was coined by Nicolas Andry (1658-1742) from the Greek roots " orthos, " meaning " straight, " and " pais, " meaning " child. " Andry believed that skeletal deformities result from muscular imbalances during childhood. In his treatise, ORTHOPEDICS or the ART OF PREVENTING AND CORRECTING IN INFANTS DEFORMITIES OF THE BODY, originally published in 1741, he defined the term " orthopedist " as a physician who prescribes corrective exercise. (Andry, 1961). Although this is not the modern usage, Andy is recognized as the creator of both the word and the science. His theories were directly antecedent to the development of the Swedish system of gymnastics by Per Henrik Ling (1776-1839). In PRINCIPIA MATHEMATICA PHILOSOPHIAE NATURALIS, which is " perhaps the most powerful and original piece of scientific reasoning ever published " (, 1949), Isaac Newton (1642-1727) laid the foundation of modern dynamics. Particularly important to the future of kinesiology was his formulation of the three laws of rest and movement, which express the relationships between forces (interaction) and their effects: I. Every body continues in its state of rest, or of uniform motion, in a right line, unless it is compelled to change that state by forces impressed upon it. (This is sometimes known as the Law of Inertia and was originally proposed by Galileo in 1638.) II. The change of motion is proportional to the motive force impressed and made in the direction of the right line in which that force is impressed (Law of Momentum). III. To every action there is always opposed an equal reaction; or, the mutual actions of two bodies upon each other are always equal and directed to the contrary parts (Law of Interaction). (Newton, 1668). The application of these laws to muscular function may be demonstrated by the following analogy: While he is pivoting, a discus thrower must grasp the discus firmly (to exert centripetal force) to prevent it from flying out of his hand. In accordance with Newton's Third Law, the missile exerts an equal and opposite reaction (centrifugal force). When his grip is released and centripetal force no longer interacts with the discus, the implement flies off in a straight line tangential to its former circular path. The distance covered by the missile is proportional to the motive force imparted to it, in accordance with the second law. The trajectory of the missile is affected by gravity, wind velocity, and other forces tending to alter its state of uniform motion, as predicted by the first law. According to the Newtonian world view, changes of motion are considered as a measure of the force that produces them. From this theory originated the idea of measuring force by the product of mass and acceleration, a concept that plays a fundamental role in kinetics. The greater the speed with which the discus thrower whirls, the greater the acceleration applied to the mass of the discus, the farther it will fly before gravity returns it to earth, and the greater the force said to have been applied to the discus. Newton is also credited with the first correct general statement of the parallelogram of forces, based on his observation that a moving body affected by two independent forces acting simultaneously moved along a diagonal equal to the vector sum of the forces acting independently. By further analysis of the laws of movement as applied by the discus thrower, it can be demonstrated mathematically that the horizontal and vertical forces acting on the flying discus are equal. The diagonal, which is equal to the vector sum of the horizontal and vertical forces, is, therefore, 45 degrees , and the missile should traverse the greatest distance when it travels at this angle. In practice, of course, other factors of lift, drag, shape, gyroscopic rotation, and so forth enter the situation, and it is possible that the most effective angle of release may not always be the one that is the theoretical optimum. Because two or more muscles may pull on a common point of insertion, each at a different angle and with a different force, the resolution of vectors of this type is a matter of considerable importance in the solution of academic problems in kinesiology. Within the recent past, physicists have demonstrated that Newton's theories are valid only within the frame of reference in which they were conceived; they do not apply to relationships between forces in the Einsteinian [relativistic] world view. This discovery has little significance for the kinesiologist, however, since he deals primarily with the forces of gross [and relatively slow] muscular movement, and these are governed by the laws of motion set forth by Newton. In his studies of muscular contraction, Keill (1674-1719) calculated the number of fibers in certain muscles, assumed that on contraction each fiber became spherical and thus shortened, and from this deduced the amount of tension developed by each fiber to lift a given weight. In AN ACCOUNT OF ANIMAL SECRETION, THE AMOUNT OF BLOOD IN THE HUMAN BODY, AND MUSCULAR MOTION (1708), Keill drew the erroneous conclusion that a muscle could not contract to less than two thirds of its greatest length............ About 1740 physiologists became excited over the phenomena produced by electrical stimulation of muscles. Haller summarized many of the early experiments in his treatise on muscle irritability, and Whytt reported clinical observations on a patient treated by electrotherapy. " Animal electricity " was proposed as a substitute for the " animal spirits " that earlier investigators had believed to be the activating force in muscular movement. During the summer of 1786, Luigi Galvani (1737 - 1798) studied the effects of atmospheric electricity on dissected frog muscles. He observed that the muscles of a frog sometimes contracted when touched by a scalpel, which led him to the conclusion that there was " indwelling electricity which proceeded along the nerve. " His Commentary on the Effects of Electricity on Muscular Motion (1791) is probably the earliest explicit statement of the presence of electrical potentials in nerve and muscle. Galvani is considered the father of experimental neurology. The study of animal electricity at once became the absorbing interest of the physiological world. The greatest name among the early students of the subject was Emil DuBois-Reymond (1818-1896), who laid the foundations of modern electrophysiology. Fascinated by the prospect of investigating muscular response produced by electrical stimulation, Guillaume Amand Duchenne (1806 - 1875) set out to classify the functions of individual muscles in relation to body movements, although he recognized that isolated muscular action does not exist in nature (Duchenne, 1959). His masterwork, PHYSIOLOGIE DES MOUVEMENTS, appeared in 1865 and has been acclaimed " one of the greatest books of all times. " (Jokl, 1956). The modern concept of locomotion originated with the studies of Borelli; however, very little was accomplished in this field prior to the publication of DIE MECHANIK DER MENSCHLICHEN GERVERKZEUGE by the Webers in 1836. Their treatise, which still stands as the classical work accomplished by purely observational methods, firmly established the mechanism of muscular action on a scientific basis. The Weber brothers, Ernst Heinrich (1795-1878), Wilhelm Eduard (1804-1891), and Eduard Friedrick Wilhelm (1806-1871), believed that the body was maintained in the erect position primarily by tension of the ligaments, with little or no muscular exertion; that in walking or running the forward motion of the limb is a pendulum-swing due to gravity; and that walking is a movement of falling forward, arrested by the weight of the body thrown on the limb as it is advanced forward. The Webers were the first to investigate the reduction in the length of an individual muscle during contraction and devoted much study to the role of bones as mechanical levers. They were also the first to describe in chronological detail the movements of the center of gravity........ On the basis of subsequent studies, Rudolf A. Fick (1886-1939) concluded that the theory of " normalstellung " [normal posture or position] was not entirely valid, as the recumbent position of a cadaver [or supine body] could not be transferred to the vertical stance [or vice versa]. The degree of lumbar lordosis is much less when the body is recumbent than when vertical; in the latter position the center of gravity shifts forward considerably more than Braune and Fischer assumed. Fick contended that no one posture is common for people of all races and cultures. Modern anthropological investigations have confirmed his opinion. [MCS: Yet many 'authorities' today still teach the existence of highly precise postures and neutral positions, together with the contention that deviation from these 'normalstellungs' is what causes back pain and dysfunction.] The late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries were most productive of physiological studies closely related to kinesiology. Adolf Eugen Fick (1829 - 1901) made important contributions to our knowledge of the mechanics of muscular movement and energetics and introduced the terms " isometric " and " isotonic. " [MCS: It will be noted that these more than a century old terms, especially 'isotonic' (same tension... throughout a given movement), are often widely applied and misunderstood. I have provided a detailed analysis of such terms in the latest edition of " Supertraining " , explaining why they need to be redefined or discarded in some situations] The study of developmental mechanics was introduced by Wilhelm Roux (1850 - 1924), who stated that muscular hypertrophy develops only after a muscle is forced to work intensively, a point of view that was later demonstrated experimentally by Werner W. Siebert. " (Siedber, 1960). B. Morpurgo showed that increased strength and hypertrophy are a result of an increase in the diameter of the individual fibers of a muscle, not a result of an increase in the number of fibers. The theory of progressive resistance exercise is based principally on the studies of Morpurgo and Siebert (Steinhaus, 1955) but Morpurgo's work is now being questioned. L. Ranvier, about 1880, discovered the difference in the speeds of contraction of red and white muscle. " The importance of his finding, " says Granit, " is that it brought functional aspects into the focus of subsequent research. " (Granit, 1970)....... [MCS: Some of you will recall the 'Nodes of Ranvier' which are found in nerve fibres with fatty myelin sheaths and which enhance speed of electrical conduction - well, Ranvier is the scientists responsible for this discovery] F. Pauwels endeavored to demonstrate that muscles and ligaments act as traction braces to reduce the magnitude of stress in the bones. His work was criticized by F. Gaynor on the grounds that it was concerned only with the stresses produced by loads placed on solid models shaped like bones. It is possible that Wolff and Roux overemphasized the importance of mechanical stresses without proper consideration for biological factors, which sometimes exceed mechanical influences. Nevertheless, the theory of functional adaptation to static stress remains a major hypothesis in the study of skeletal development. J. H. (1957) has reviewed the material in the field in an effort to construct a working hypothesis of the developmental and functional relationships between the skeletal system and the neuromuscular system..... [MCS: Only recently the importance of bracing or tension elements in physical structure and function has once again attracted interest in the form of " tensegrity " (tension integrity) models of the joints, cells and other bodily parts. Zenker and I discussed this issue several months ago.] Interest in the subject of posture has declined among kinesiologists in the United States during the last few years. In part, result decline may have resulted from general acceptance of the dictum that " the physiological benefits obtained from correction of common postural defects are mostly imaginary " (Karpovich, 1965) in part, it may reflect the growing realization that individual differences almost preclude valid generalizations..... [MCS: Yet, certain 'experts' continue to make unsubstantiated claims about correlations between health, pain and posture, especially concerning the lumbar spine. One of our members, Barrett Dorko, has much information about this mythology on his website at: http://www.barrettdorko.com/desk.htm ] According to the old psychological stimulus-response theory, the individual is merely a communication channel between the input and the output. This view fails to consider the contribution that the individual makes to the circuit. In information theory it is recognized that through experience man accumulates certain knowledge about his external environment, such as how an object travels through space, and that the signals he receives from his kinesthetic proprioceptors reveal to him how his body is responding to the external presentation. The individual is viewed as a limited-capacity channel, receiving and responding to signals originating from internal sources as well as from the external display. The relative importance of these two types of stimuli in determining individual response appears to vary with practice and with the ease or difficulty of the required response. One of the chief difficulties confronting a performer is to separate one signal from another when they are presented in rapid succession; perception of essential data is usually obscured by competing signals that create " noise " on the input circuits. A distinguishing characteristic of a skilled performer is his ability to select, integrate, and respond only to those signals that are germane to the situation; that is, in effect, to filter out signals that are mere noise. The fact that stimuli may be correlated with each other may enhance the difficulty for the performer........ [MCS: Yet there are those who maintain that simplistic drills on various balancing devices or with apparatus like dumbbells or Pilates machines will enhance complex motor abilities in entirely different settings.] Since the appearance of the first edition of this book, the physiologically motivated researchers largely have concerned themselves with the waveforms of electrical activity in the nerves or brain or in the transmission properties of nerve tissue. Psychologically oriented investigators have tended to search for regular descriptions of the input-output of the human organisms. For example, the neurogeometric theory holds that the receptor and the motor systems are linked by space-time organized feedback mechanisms. These are multidimensional. Motion is made up of posture, transport, manipulation, and tremor movements, each controlled by its own sensory feedback. The brain coordinates and regulates these feedbacks. Learning is thus based on the brain's integration of the anatomic and physiologic relations between the efferent and the afferent systems. [MCS: Not many folk are familiar with the Neurogeometric Theory described and studied by KU & MF in their textbook " Perception and Motion: An Analysis of Space-Structured Behaviour " 1962, a book which I found to be very useful in the early days of my own PhD research.] Such new insights have rich import for kinesiology, but also introduce new complications. The advanced student must now become accustomed to such explanations as the suggestion that a smooth landing after a drop is due to the release of a " complete preprogrammed open-loop sequence of neuromuscular activity virtually unaided by myotatic feedback. " (Watt, 1966) [MCS: What the last sentence is referring to is the phenomenon of feedforward, virtual control, or 'open-loop' control taking place in the brain before a motor action takes place. Feedback, or closed-loop control, involves electrical information being fed back from the proprioceptors and other senses to enable us to correct any ongoing action. Feedforward is extremely important in all rapid and ballistic actions, for instance, in throwing, hitting, kicking and catching actions. Both feedback and feedfor ward are discussed in detail in Ch 8 of the latest " Supertraining " ] While further use of the electromyograph (EMG) will continue to refine our understanding of how the body functions, it seems unlikely that additional major surprises will emerge from this technique. Probably, the next important advances will result from computer simulation studies, particularly of situations in which it would be impossible to use human subjects...... [MCS: This discussion rightly cautions against excessive reliance on the EMG to analyse human movement, which can yield both useful and misleading information.] -------------------- Dr Mel C Siff Denver, USA Supertraining/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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