| Literature DB >> 27379233 |
Hangil Lee1, Dokyeong Ha1, Yeoun-Seung Kang1, Hyung-Soon Park1.
Abstract
This research analyzed the effect of bilateral hinged knee braces on a healthy knee from a biomechanical frame in vivo. This was accomplished by fitting a knee brace with two customized wireless force/torque (F/T) sensors that could readily record force and torque during live motion, while the kinetics at the knee were computed using the inverse dynamics of the motion capture and force plate data. Four tasks to test the brace's effects were drop vertical jumping, pivoting, stop vertical jumping, and cutting. The results showed that the hinges in the knee brace can absorb up to 18% of the force and 2.7% of the torque at the knee during various athletic motions. Thus, the hinges demonstrated minimal effect in reducing the mechanical load on the knee. There were limitations concerning the consistency of the motions performed by the subjects during the trials and the influence of the other portions of the brace to evaluate the overall effectiveness of the brace as a whole. Future works may incorporate a fatigue protocol and injured subjects to better determine the effects of the brace. There is still a need for more research on the biomechanical influence of knee braces to develop safer and more effective products.Entities:
Keywords: biomechanics; force plate; kinetics; knee brace; motion capture; sports injury
Year: 2016 PMID: 27379233 PMCID: PMC4909737 DOI: 10.3389/fbioe.2016.00050
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Bioeng Biotechnol ISSN: 2296-4185
Figure 1Illustrations of the four tasks. (A) DVJ: drop off of a box and jump off the force plates, (B) pivoting: pivoting off one foot planted on a force plate, (C) SVJ: running approach, landing with each foot on a force plate and jumping vertically, and (D) cutting: running toward a force plate, planting right foot on the X and pushing off diagonally in the direction of the tape.
Figure 2Customized .
Figure 3To calculate the kinetics at the knee, the lower extremity was modeled into a foot and shank segment based on marker data. Inverse dynamics was used with the ground reaction force and torque to compute the resulting force and torque in the knee along each of the three axes of the coordinate system described above.
Figure 4Representative pivoting data. Three sets of graphs for the (A) force and (B) torque of the braced condition, (C) force and (D) torque of the unbraced condition, and (E) force and (F) torque for the F/T sensor data.
Averaged and normalized peak-to-peak force (newton per kilogram) and torque (newton meter per kilogram) values along with the SDs at the knee joint for the W/O Brace condition and With Brace condition.
| Task/component | % | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Normalized Fx (DVJ, N/kg) | 5.84 (SD ± 2.59) | 6.04 (SD ± 1.71) | 3.74 |
| Normalized Fy (DVJ, N/kg) | 3.09 (SD ± 0.63) | 2.32 (SD ± 0.52) | 10.17 |
| Normalized Fz (DVJ, Nm/kg) | 19.06 (SD ± 4.82) | 17.77 (SD ± 3.72) | 1.52 |
| Normalized Tx (DVJ, Nm/kg) | 4.97 (SD ± 1.41) | 4.98 (SD ± 1.47) | 0.02 |
| Normalized Ty (DVJ, Nm/kg) | 4.33 (SD ± 1.76) | 4.27 (SD ± 0.77) | 0.34 |
| Normalized Tz (DVJ, Nm/kg) | 1.10 (SD ± 0.65) | 0.66 (SD ± 0.08) | 0.89 |
| Normalized Fx (Pivot, N/kg) | 1.63 (SD ± 0.92) | 1.52 (SD ± 0.48) | 5.48 |
| Normalized Fy (Pivot, N/kg) | 1.11 (SD ± 0.40) | 0.88 (SD ± 0.35) | 18.19 |
| Normalized Fz (Pivot, Nm/kg) | 9.72 (SD ± 1.57) | 9.29 (SD ± 1.38) | 2.20 |
| Normalized Tx (Pivot, Nm/kg) | 1.25 (SD ± 0.66) | 2.45 (SD ± 0.93) | 0.02 |
| Normalized Ty (Pivot, Nm/kg) | 2.12 (SD ± 0.99) | 2.90 (SD ± 0.69) | 0.19 |
| Normalized Tz (Pivot, Nm/kg) | 0.34 (SD ± 0.09) | 0.45 (SD ± 0.09) | 0.55 |
| Normalized Fx (SVJ, N/kg) | 8.85 (SD ± 2.92) | 8.46 (SD ± 1.62) | 2.93 |
| Normalized Fy (SVJ, N/kg) | 2.53 (SD ± 0.72) | 2.68 (SD ± 0.82) | 8.17 |
| Normalized Fz (SVJ, Nm/kg) | 17.89 (SD ± 2.85) | 17.92 (SD ± 3.18) | 1.63 |
| Normalized Tx (SVJ, Nm/kg) | 4.51 (SD ± 1.54) | 5.49 (SD ± 1.96) | 0.02 |
| Normalized Ty (SVJ, Nm/kg) | 4.32 (SD ± 0.74) | 6.01 (SD ± 1.27) | 0.23 |
| Normalized Tz (SVJ, Nm/kg) | 1.17 (SD ± 0.68) | 1.86 (SD ± 0.94) | 0.26 |
| Normalized Fx (Cut, N/kg) | 7.04 (SD ± 1.79) | 8.32 (SD ± 2.97) | 2.39 |
| Normalized Fy (Cut, N/kg) | 6.60 (SD ± 1.35) | 6.07 (SD ± 0.88) | 3.47 |
| Normalized Fz (Cut, Nm/kg) | 19.52 (SD ± 3.67) | 18.94 (SD ± 2.52) | 1.47 |
| Normalized Tx (Cut, Nm/kg) | 4.24 (SD ± 2.21) | 6.30 (SD ± 2.01) | 0.02 |
| Normalized Ty (Cut, Nm/kg) | 5.08 (SD ± 1.37) | 6.29 (SD ± 0.95) | 0.22 |
| Normalized Tz (Cut, Nm/kg) | 1.07 (SD ± 0.38) | 1.86 (SD ± 0.86) | 2.75 |
“% F/T taken by Hinge” refers to the maximum percentage of force and torque the hinge absorbed in comparison to the force/torque at knee joint for the With Brace condition.