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Journal Article

Citation

Bazrgari B, Shirazi-Adl A, Lariviere C. J. Biomech. 2009; 42(9): 1193-1200.

Affiliation

Department of Mechanical Engineering, Ecole Polytechnique, P.O. Box 6079, Station "centre-ville", Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3C 3A7.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jbiomech.2009.03.014

PMID

19375707

Abstract

Accurate quantification of the trunk transient response to sudden loading is crucial in prevention, evaluation, rehabilitation and training programs. An iterative dynamic kinematics-driven approach was used to evaluate the temporal variation of trunk muscle forces, internal loads and stability under sudden application of an anterior horizontal load. The input kinematics is hypothesized to embed basic dynamic characteristics of the system that can be decoded by our kinematics-driven approach. The model employs temporal variation of applied load, trunk forward displacement and surface EMG of select muscles measured on two healthy and one chronic low-back pain subjects to a sudden load. A finite element model accounting for measured kinematics, nonlinear passive properties of spine, detailed trunk musculature with wrapping of global extensor muscles, gravity load and trunk biodynamic characteristics is used to estimate the response under measured sudden load. Results demonstrate a delay of approximately 200ms in extensor muscle activation in response to sudden loading. Net moment and spinal loads substantially increase as muscles are recruited to control the trunk under sudden load. As a result and due also to the trunk flexion, system stability significantly improves. The reliability of the kinematics-driven approach in estimating the trunk response while decoding measured kinematics is demonstrated. Estimated large spinal loads highlight the risk of injury that likely further increases under larger perturbations, muscle fatigue and longer delays in activation.


Language: en

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