There appears to be both stretching and sarcomerogenesis, but the stretching can only go so far. My surgeon kind of addressed this when he was asked why his max for tibial lengthening is 6 cm.
Dr Parihar: The general experience, and my own experience has been that after 5 cms, people start having trouble with more pain, difficulty to exercise their muscles, and start developing deformities such as equinus (ballerina) and flexion of the knee. Muscles can stretch to a point (like a rubber band), but beyond that point they lose their elasticity (and become like a rope). Initially muscle stretch keeps pace with the increase in length of the bone, beyond 5 cms the muscles are not stretching enough to keep pace with the bone lengthening. They then pull on whatever bone/joint they are attached to and cause deformities which are very difficult to stretch out with physio, and require surgery.
http://www.limblengtheningforum.com/index.php?topic=2783.msg43784#msg43784
Thanks. I guess it was here that I read the rubber band analogy and it was Dr. Parihar, not Dr. Lee. Parihar mentions muscle stretch in the interview but not the production of new tissue really. I would like to know when tissue formation happens and what conditions may interfere with that.
Does new tissue form as you are stimulating it with passive overstretch during lengthening, or does it mostly form
after the lengthening phase under full stretch?
If it's more the latter, that explains why he is only discussing muscle stretching and respecting the limits of that. Things could be too wonky or inflamed after 5cm for new tissue to form properly. If it's more the former (new tissue forms gradually as you lengthen), how well you end up optimizing for new muscle growth instead of lengthened/inelastic muscle seems like it could be a crapshoot for each patient.
The quote also makes it sounds like the 5cm marker is based mostly on collective experience, but I was hoping there was a more detailed, mechanism-level explanation as well.
I think this is super interesting. I agree with this and other research I've found on this topic. More studies should definitely look into this
Hi cyborg. Thanks for your content. I see you have a thread on questions for the surgeons. Could there be a question in the future on the timing and the limits of new muscle formation as you are doing LL? Is sarcomerogenesis deliberately optimized for at all in LL protocols and if so, how?
I agree, super interesting topic.