Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
550023 Applied Ergonomics 2015 11 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Predictions of six lifting analysis tools for the spine loads were compared.•26 symmetric/asymmetric lifting tasks in upright/flexed postures were considered.•Significantly different spinal loads were predicted by the tools.•The potential risk of injury could vary depending on the tool used.•The shortcomings of each tool and its domain of applications were identified.

Different lifting analysis tools are commonly used to assess spinal loads and risk of injury. Distinct musculoskeletal models with various degrees of accuracy are employed in these tools affecting thus their relative accuracy in practical applications. The present study aims to compare predictions of six tools (HCBCF, LSBM, 3DSSPP, AnyBody, simple polynomial, and regression models) for the L4-L5 and L5-S1 compression and shear loads in twenty-six static activities with and without hand load. Significantly different spinal loads but relatively similar patterns for the compression (R2 > 0.87) were computed. Regression models and AnyBody predicted intradiscal pressures in closer agreement with available in vivo measurements (RMSE ≈ 0.12 MPa). Due to the differences in predicted spinal loads, the estimated risk of injury alters depending on the tool used. Each tool is evaluated to identify its shortcomings and preferred application domains.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Computer Science Human-Computer Interaction
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