| Literature DB >> 30497482 |
Takuma Inai1,2, Tomoya Takabayashi3, Mutsuaki Edama3, Masayoshi Kubo3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Sit-to-stand movements are a necessary part of daily life, and excessive mechanical stress on the articular cartilage has been reported to encourage the progression of osteoarthritis. Although a change in hip joint angle at seat-off may affect hip joint contact force during a sit-to-stand movement, the effect is unclear. This study aimed to examine the effect of the hip joint angle at seat-off on the hip joint contact force during a sit-to-stand movement by using a computer simulation.Entities:
Keywords: Hip joint angle; Hip joint contact force; Seat-off; Sit-to-stand movement
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30497482 PMCID: PMC6267796 DOI: 10.1186/s12938-018-0610-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomed Eng Online ISSN: 1475-925X Impact factor: 2.819
Fig. 1Musculoskeletal model. Eight muscles (iliopsoas, gluteus maximus, vastus, rectus femoris, hamstrings, tibialis anterior, soleus, and gastrocnemius) were attached to the right lower limb. Furthermore, the muscles of the left lower limb were assumed to perform the same activities as those of the right lower limb
Fig. 2Simulation flowchart. In an STS movement, static optimization is conducted for each frame. The muscle forces during an STS movement are estimated 20 times by using variable parameters. Therefore, estimations of muscle forces were conducted 14,360 (= 20 × 718) times in this computer simulation study
Fig. 3Postures at seat-off. The colors magenta, blue, green, and red indicate the top of the trunk, hip joint, knee joint, and ankle joint, respectively. The hip joint height is set to 0.513 m [18]. a All the postures generated at seat-off (2911 variations) and b adopted postures at seat-off (718 variations)
Fig. 4Illustration of a normalized joint angles and b a posture at seat-off. The normalized joint angles of the hip, knee, and ankle joints are multiplied by the hip, knee, and ankle angles at seat-off, respectively, to generate an STS movement
Muscle parameters in this study
| Physiological cross-sectional area (cm2) | Muscle moment arm length (m) | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean | SD | Hip | Knee | Ankle | |
| Iliopsoas | 28.9 | 6.9 | 0.022 | – | – |
| Gluteus maximus | 46.8 | 8.7 | 0.027 | – | – |
| Vastus | 157.4 | 31.5 | – | 0.044 | – |
| Rectus femoris | 34.8 | 7.4 | 0.014 | 0.044 | – |
| Hamstrings | 73.0 | 16.3 | 0.011 | 0.028 | – |
| Tibialis anterior | 15.8 | 2.9 | – | – | 0.043 |
| Soleus | 124.1 | 24.9 | – | – | 0.026 |
| Gastrocnemius | 73.1 | 16.0 | – | 0.022 | 0.031 |
Fig. 5Relationship among the hip joint angle at seat-off, peak hip joint contact force, peak hip extensor muscle force, and peak hip extension moment during the STS movements. All relationships in a–d are approximately linear
Fig. 6STS movements. a Normal STS movement. Doorenbosch et al. [16] reported that the hip joint angle at seat-off is 93.4 ± 8.4°. Thus, the STS movement when the hip flexion angle at seat-off is closest to 93° is regarded as a normal STS movement (black solid line). b, c STS movement when the hip joint contact forces are minimum (blue solid line) and maximum (red solid line), respectively
Comparison of the results of this study and of the previous studies
| This study | Previous studies | |
|---|---|---|
| Joint moments (Nm/kg) | ||
| Minimum |Hip extension moment| | ||
| Peak hip extension moment | 0.24* | 0.24a |
| Minimum |Knee extension moment| | ||
| Peak knee extension moment | 0.47* | 0.51a |
| Minimum |Ankle plantarflexion moment| | ||
| Peak ankle plantarflexion moment | − 0.07* | 0.02a |
| All STS movements (718 variations) | 1.51* | 1.53a |
| Normal STS movements (110 variations) | 0.52 (0.10) | 0.71 (0.16)b |
| Muscle forces (mean peak) (N/kg) | ||
| All STS movements (718 variations) | ||
| Gluteus maximus | 19.0† | 5.6d |
| Hamstrings | 25.8† | 7.8d |
| Quadriceps (vastus and rectus femoris) | 37.6† | 36.5d |
| Sum of the peak hip and peak knee extensor muscle forces | 82.4† | 44.7d |
| Normal STS movements (110 variations) | ||
| Gluteus maximus | 16.9‡ | – |
| Hamstrings | 7.0‡ | – |
| Quadriceps (vastus and rectus femoris) | 32.4‡ | – |
| Sum of the peak hip and peak knee extensor muscle forces | 56.3‡ | – |
| Joint contact force (N/kg) | ||
| Normal STS movements (110 variations) | ||
| Mean of the peak hip joint contact force | 26.3‡ | 19.2e |
| 21.3f | ||
| 19.6g | ||
aYoshioka et al. [18]. The seat height was 0.4 m
bInai et al. [43]. The seat height was 0.4 m
cDoorenbosch et al. [16]. The seat height was unknown
dYoshioka et al. [22]. The seat height was 0.4 m
eBergmann et al. [25]. The seat height was 0.5 m. The value was calculated from {(1.81 BW + 2.08 BW + 1.82 BW + 2.20 BW + 1.90 BW)/5} × 9.8 m/s2. BW: body weight
fBergmann et al. [27]. The seat height was 0.45 m. The value was calculated from 1600 N/75 kg
gStansfield et al. [26]. The seat height was unknown. The value was calculated from 2.0 BW × 9.8 m/s2
* The static components of the joint moments in this study were compared with the values reported by a previous study because the STS movements reported by Yoshioka et al. [18] were slow (4.12–10.98 s)
†The mean value was calculated from the adopted STS movements of 878 variations because Yoshioka et al. [22] calculated their mean value from various STS movements of 160,086 variations
‡The seat height in this study was 0.4 m. The mean value was calculated from the normal STS movements (i.e., the range of the hip flexion angle at seat-off was 93 ± 8°)