Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4051036 Clinical Biomechanics 2010 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundThe main functions of the cervical spine are the stabilization and the orientation of the head. Pathologies are complex and difficult to diagnose. The first sign of the dysfunction is an abnormal intervertebral motion. It is the purpose of this feasibility study to determine the intersegmental motions and loading conditions of the cervical spine in vivo with standard clinical investigation methods.MethodsWe propose a new approach which merges full flexion–extension X-ray images, and continuous motion of the whole cervical spine obtained with a tracking motion system. These data were used as input for a subject-specific rigid body model of the cervical spine computed with the software MSC.Adams. This model simulates the cervical spine extension/flexion, the intervertebral motions are deduced using an inverse kinematics procedure.FindingsSubject-specific rigid body models were computed from data of two subjects. The intersegmental motion and loading conditions were calculated. We found that the loading amplitudes depended on the intervertebral level, and that subject specific patterns were highlighted. We noticed an unsymmetrical behavior in flexion and extension. Furthermore intervertebral rotations were correlated with the global motion of the cervical spine.InterpretationA subject-specific rigid body model merged data from classical flexion–extension radiographs and noninvasive external motion capture. Our approach is based on inverse kinematics allowing the estimation of the intervertebral motion and mechanical behavior of the cervical spine in vivo, which gives valuable information concerning biomechanics of the cervical spine in vivo for cervical spine clinical investigation.

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