Greybeck BJ, Wettergreen M, Hubmayr RD, Boriek AM. Diaphragm curvature modulates the relationship between muscle shortening and volume displacement. Am J Physiol Regul Integr Comp Physiol 301: R76 -R82, 2011. First published March 23, 2011 doi:10.1152/ajpregu.00673.2010.-During physiological spontaneous breathing maneuvers, the diaphragm displaces volume while maintaining curvature. However, with maximal diaphragm activation, curvature decreases sharply. We tested the hypotheses that the relationship between diaphragm muscle shortening and volume displacement (VD) is nonlinear and that curvature is a determinant of such a relationship. Radiopaque markers were surgically placed on three neighboring muscle fibers in the midcostal region of the diaphragm in six dogs. The three-dimensional locations were determined using biplanar fluoroscopy and diaphragm VD, curvature, and muscle shortening were computed in the prone and supine postures during spontaneous breathing (SB), spontaneous inspiration efforts after airway occlusion at lung volumes ranging from functional residual capacity (FRC) to total lung capacity, and during bilateral maximal phrenic nerve stimulation at those same lung volumes. In supine dogs, diaphragm VD was approximately two-to three-fold greater during maximal phrenic nerve stimulation than during SB. The contribution of muscle shortening to VD nonlinearly increases with level of diaphragm activation independent of posture. During submaximal diaphragm activation, the contribution is essentially linear due to constancy of diaphragm curvature in both the prone and supine posture. However, the sudden loss of curvature during maximal bilateral phrenic nerve stimulation at muscle shortening values greater than 40% (⌬L/ L FRC) causes a nonlinear increase in the contribution of muscle shortening to diaphragm VD, which is concomitant with a nonlinear change in diaphragm curvature. We conclude that the nonlinear relationship between diaphragm muscle shortening and its VD is, in part, due to a loss of its curvature at extreme muscle shortening. respiratory muscles; chest wall; kinematics; mechanics; rib cage DURING INSPIRATION REQUIRING submaximal diaphragm activation, muscle bundles of the diaphragm shorten and the dome descends, displaces volume, and causes the lungs to inflate. As the lungs inflate and the diaphragm muscle shortens, curvature is constant and transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi) decreases proportionately with diaphragm muscle fiber tension (2). It has been generally accepted that during breathing, diaphragm volume displacement (VD) is primarily caused by muscle shortening (12,13,16,23). This is evidenced by studies showing a linear relationship between costal shortening and diaphragm VD, using geometric diaphragm models incorporating empirical parameters (12, 16). However, these studies only computed VD values during spontaneous breathing (SB) in the supine posture when curvature is constant (4). Dynamic Spatial Reconstruction (DSR) imaging has also been used in the computation of diaphra...