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Do the hamstrings operate at increased muscle-tendon lengths and velocities after surgical lengthening?

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Do the hamstrings operate at increased muscle-tendon lengths and velocities after surgical lengthening?

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Children with crouch gait frequently walk with improved knee extension during the terminal swing and stance phases following hamstrings lengthening surgery; however, the mechanisms responsible for these improvements are unclear. This study tested the hypothesis that surgical lengthening enables the hamstrings of persons with cerebral palsy to operate at longer muscle-tendon lengths or lengthen at faster muscle-tendon velocities during walking. Sixty-nine subjects who had improved knee extension after surgery were retrospectively examined. The muscle-tendon lengths and velocities of the subjects’ semimembranosus muscles were estimated by combining kinematic data from gait analysis with a three-dimensional computer model of the lower extremity. Log-linear analyses confirmed that the subjects who walked with abnormally short muscle-tendon lengths and/or slow muscle-tendon velocities preoperatively tended to walk with longer lengths (21 of 29 subjects, p<0.01) or faster velocities (30 of 4

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