| Literature DB >> 29809082 |
Antoine Falisse1, Sam Van Rossom1, Johannes Gijsbers2, Frans Steenbrink2, Ben J H van Basten2, Ilse Jonkers1, Antonie J van den Bogert3, Friedl De Groote1.
Abstract
Musculoskeletal modeling and simulations have become popular tools for analyzing human movements. However, end users are often not aware of underlying modeling and computational assumptions. This study investigates how these assumptions affect biomechanical gait analysis outcomes performed with Human Body Model and the OpenSim gait2392 model. The authors compared joint kinematics, kinetics, and muscle forces resulting from processing data from 7 healthy adults with both models. Although outcome variables had similar patterns, there were statistically significant differences in joint kinematics (maximal difference: 9.8° [1.5°] in sagittal plane hip rotation), kinetics (maximal difference: 0.36 [0.10] N·m/kg in sagittal plane hip moment), and muscle forces (maximal difference: 8.51 [1.80] N/kg for psoas). These differences might be explained by differences in hip and knee joint center locations up to 2.4 (0.5) and 1.9 (0.2) cm in the posteroanterior and inferosuperior directions, respectively, and by the offset in pelvic reference frames of about 10° around the mediolateral axis. The choice of model may not influence the conclusions in clinical settings, where the focus is on interpreting deviations from the reference data, but it will affect the conclusions of mechanical analyses in which the goal is to obtain accurate estimates of kinematics and loading.Entities:
Keywords: biomechanics; musculoskeletal modeling; simulation; static optimization
Year: 2018 PMID: 29809082 DOI: 10.1123/jab.2017-0156
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Biomech ISSN: 1065-8483 Impact factor: 1.833