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. 1993 Jan;75(1):137-40.
doi: 10.1302/0301-620X.75B1.8421011.

The relative strengths of the rotator cuff muscles. A cadaver study

Affiliations

The relative strengths of the rotator cuff muscles. A cadaver study

J F Keating et al. J Bone Joint Surg Br. 1993 Jan.

Abstract

We studied five cadaver shoulders to determine the strength relationship of the four rotator cuff muscles. The mean fibre length and volume of each muscle were measured, from which the physiological cross-sectional area was calculated. This value was used to estimate the force which each muscle was capable of generating. The lever arm of each muscle about the humeral head was then measured and the moment exerted was calculated. The strength ratios between the muscles were more or less constant in the five specimens. Subscapularis was the most powerful muscle and contributed 53% of the cuff moment; supraspinatus contributed 14%, infraspinatus 22% and teres minor 10%. The force-generating capacity of the subscapularis was equal to that of the other three muscles combined.

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