Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
10435040 | Medical Engineering & Physics | 2015 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
The lower limbs are subjected to large impact forces on a daily basis during gait, and ambulators rely on various mechanisms to protect the musculoskeletal system from these potentially damaging shocks. However, it is difficult to assess the efficacy of anatomical mechanisms and potential clinical interventions on impact forces because of limitations of the testing environment. The current paper describes a new in vivo measurement device (sudden loading evaluation device, or SLED) designed to address shortcomings of previous loading protocols. To establish the repeatability and validity of this testing device, reliability and human participant data were collected while the stiffnesses of simulated and prosthetic limbs were systematically varied. The peak impact forces delivered by the SLED ranged from 706 ± 3 N to 2157 ± 32 N during reliability testing and from 784 ± 30 N to 938 ± 18 N with the human participant. The relatively low standard deviations indicate good reliability within the impacts delivered by the SLED, while the magnitude of the loads experienced by the human participant (98-117% BW) were comparable to ground reaction forces during level walking. Thus, the SLED may be valuable as a research tool for investigations of lower-limb impact loading events.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Engineering
Biomedical Engineering
Authors
Erin Boutwell, Rebecca Stine, Steven Gard,