TL;DR: Spindle characteristics represent one of many factors that govern proprioceptive regulation in skeletal muscle, and in neck muscles, the central connectivity of these receptors remains undefined, and although there are anatomic differences between the neck flexor and extensor, the functional implications of these differences are not clear.
Abstract: Study design Tissue blocks comprising muscle and bone from C5 to C7 segments were harvested at autopsy from 16 individuals ranging in age from 4 to 77 years. The prevertebral longus colli and postvertebral multifidus muscle pairs from one side in each individual were randomly selected for this study of muscle spindles. Objectives To determine muscle spindle distribution, morphology, and density for the longus colli and multifidus in caudal segments of the human cervical spine, and to assess whether changes are evident from infancy to old age. Summary of background data Age-related changes to the osteoligamentous framework of the cervical spine have been well documented. Postural modification accompanies these structural alterations, but there have been limited attempts to document whether muscle sustains a comparable level of morphologic alteration. Previous studies have examined muscle spindles in the neck muscles of various animal models and in a variety of isolated human muscles. However, most of these studies incurred bias through sampling and methodologic assumptions. Methods The longus colli and multifidus were resected between C5 and C7, and between left and right pairs selected randomly for spindle analysis. These vertebral segments were selected deliberately because they form the apex of the cervical lordosis and the site at which the greatest age-related modification occurs. The tissue was processed in paraffin, sectioned, and then stained by Masson's trichrome. Spindle characteristics were examined using light microscopy and analyzed by unbiased stereologic methods. A one-sample paired t test was used to ascertain whether the differences in spindle density between the two muscles were statistically significant. Results The longus colli has a high density of muscle spindles, which appear clustered and concentrated anterolaterally, away from the vertebral body. The multifidus has a low density of muscle spindles, which are found predominantly as single units concentrated closely to the vertebral lamina. No change in spindle distribution, morphology, and density were observed with age. Conclusions The current study examined spindle characteristics for an intrinsic neck muscle pair whose coactivation contributes to segmental stability of the cervical spine. The distribution and morphology of muscle spindles differ between the longus colli and the multifidus. In addition, these muscles have significant differences in terms of mean spindle density. Spindle characteristics represent one of many factors that govern proprioceptive regulation in skeletal muscle, and in neck muscles, the central connectivity of these receptors remains undefined. Therefore, although there are anatomic differences between the neck flexor and extensor, the functional implications of these differences are not clear. It is also of interest that spindle characteristics remain unchanged in these intrinsic muscles whose underlying segments are subject to age-related osteoligamentous changes.
TL;DR: It is concluded that LC counteracts the lordosis increment related to the weight of the head and to the contraction of the dorsal neck muscles, which form a sleeve which encloses and stabilizes the cervical spine in all positions of theHead.
Abstract: To determine the postural role of longus colli (LC) and dorsal neck muscles, we have studied the relationship between their cross-sectional areas related to their force of contraction and the lordosis and the length of the cervical spine. This study was carried out in 36 healthy subjects. Muscle cross-sectional areas were measured by computerized tomography. The index of lordosis and the length of the cervical spine were measured on an X-ray profile. The cross-sectional area of LC was correlated to the lordosis index (R=−0.432, p<0.02) whereas all the other parameters were not correlated. The authors conclude that LC counteracts the lordosis increment related to the weight of the head and to the contraction of the dorsal neck muscles. Postural functions of LC and postcervical muscles are complementary. They form a sleeve which encloses and stabilizes the cervical spine in all positions of the head.
TL;DR: There was very marked synchronous EMG activity of the LC and StM muscles during resisted forward flexion, marked activity during neck flexion against head weight in the supine position, and during resisted right and left side‐bending.
Abstract: Using bipolar fine-wire electrodes, we examined the right and left longus colli (LC) and sternocleidomastoideus (StM) muscles electromyographically in ten healthy young adults. Action potentials were recorded on FM magnetic tape and each experiment was also videotaped. The head-neck motions were recorded using a special neck goniometer. The muscles were studied in sitting, supine, prone and lateral positions, both during free movements and against resistance. There was complete inactivity in both muscles in relaxed sitting, normal breathing, deep expiration, and wet and dry swallowing. There was very marked synchronous EMG activity of the LC and StM muscles during resisted forward flexion, marked activity during neck flexion against head weight in the supine position, and during resisted right and left side-bending. Variable activity was found in both muscles during deep breathing, coughing, forceful blowing, loading on top of the head, resisted backward extension, neck holding against head weight in the prone position and in twisting movements downwards and upwards. During free flexion-extension movements, LC and StM act synchronously. During free lateral bending they work homolaterally, but during free rotation to the right, the right LC works with the left StM and vice versa.
TL;DR: This finding suggests that the selection of exercise based on a precise assessment of the patients’ neuromuscular control and targeted exercise interventions based on this assessment are likely to be the most beneficial to patients with neck pain.
Abstract: Objectives: Altered activation of the deep cervical flexors (longus colli and longus capitis) has been found in individuals with neck pain disorders but the response to training has been variable. Therefore, this study investigated the relationship between change in deep cervical flexor muscle activity and symptoms in response to specific training.