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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
11

Compensatory mechanisms in below-knee amputee walking and their effects on knee joint loading, metabolic cost and angular momentum

Silverman, Anne Katherine 09 December 2010 (has links)
Unilateral, below-knee amputees have altered gait mechanics, which can significantly affect mobility. For example, amputees often have asymmetric leg loading as well as higher metabolic cost and an increased risk of falling compared to non-amputees. Below-knee amputees lose the functional use of the ankle muscles, which are critical in non-amputee walking for providing body support, forward propulsion and leg-swing initiation. The ankle muscles also regulate angular momentum in non-amputees, which is important for providing body stability and preventing falls. Thus, compensatory mechanisms in amputee walking are developed to accomplish the functional tasks normally provided by the ankle muscles. In Chapters 2 and 3, three-dimensional forward dynamics simulations of amputee and non-amputee walking were generated to identify compensatory mechanisms and their effects on joint loading and metabolic cost. Results showed that the prosthesis provided body support, but did not provide sufficient body propulsion or leg-swing initiation. As a result, compensations by the residual leg gluteus maximus, gluteus medius, and hamstrings were needed. The simulations also showed the intact leg tibio-femoral joint contact impulse was greater than the residual leg and that the vasti and hamstrings were the primary contributors to the joint impulse on both the intact and residual legs. The amputee simulation had higher metabolic cost than the non-amputee simulation, which was primarily due to prolonged muscle activity from the residual leg gluteus maximus, gluteus medius, hamstrings, vasti and intact leg vasti and ankle muscles. In Chapter 4, whole-body angular momentum in amputees and non-amputees was analyzed. Reduced residual leg propulsion resulted in a smaller range of sagittal plane angular momentum in the second half of the gait cycle. Thus, to conserve angular momentum, reduced braking was needed in the first half of the gait cycle. Decreased residual leg braking appears to be an important mechanism to regulate sagittal plane angular momentum in amputee walking, but was also associated with a greater range of angular momentum that may contribute to reduced stability in amputees. These studies have provided important insight into compensatory mechanisms in below-knee amputee walking and have the potential to guide rehabilitation methods to improve amputee mobility. / text
12

Predicting Muscle Activations in a Forward-Inverse Dynamics Framework Using Stability-Inspired Optimization and an In Vivo-Based 6DoF Knee Joint

Potvin, Brigitte January 2016 (has links)
Modeling and simulations are useful tools to help understand knee function and injuries. As there are more muscles in the human knee joint than equations of motion, optimization protocols are required to solve a problem. The purpose of this thesis was to improve the biofidelity of these simulations by adding in vivo constraints derived from experimental intra-cortical pin data and stability-inspired objective functions within an OpenSim-Matlab forward-inverse dynamics simulation framework on lower limb muscle activation predictions. Results of this project suggest that constraining the model knee joint’s ranges of motion with pin data had a significant impact on lower limb kinematics, especially in rotational degrees of freedom. This affected muscle activation predictions and knee joint loading when compared to unconstrained kinematics. Furthermore, changing the objective will change muscle activation predictions although minimization of muscle activation as an objective remains more accurate than the stability inspired functions, at least for gait. /// La modélisation et les simulations in-silico sont des outils importants pour approfondir notre compréhension de la fonction du genou et ses blessures. Puisqu’il y a plus de muscles autour du genou humain que d’équations de mouvement, des procédures d’optimisation sont requises pour résoudre le système. Le but de cette thèse était d’explorer l’effet de changer l’objectif de cette optimisation à des fonctions inspirées par la stabilité du genou par l’entremise d’un cadre de simulation de dynamique directe et inverse utilisant MatLab et OpenSim ainsi qu'un model musculo-squelétaire contraint cinématiquement par des données expérimentales dérivées de vis intra-corticales, sur les prédictions d’activation musculaire de la jambe. Les résultats de ce projet suggèrent que les contraintes de mouvement imposées sur le genou modélisé ont démontré des effets importants sur la cinématique de la jambe et conséquemment sur les prédictions d'activation musculaire et le chargement du genou. La fonction objective de l'optimisation change aussi les prédictions d’activations musculaires, bien que la fonction minimisant la consommation énergétique soit la plus juste, du moins pour la marche.
13

Subject-specific musculoskeletal modeling of the lower extremities in persons with unilateral cerebral palsy

Klets, Olesya January 2011 (has links)
The computational musculoskeletal models that are used to study muscle moment-generating capacities of persons with movement disorders and planning treatment options must be accurate, and take into account the inter-individual variability of musculoskeletal geometry. In Paper I the methods of creating the subject-specific musculoskeletal model of the lower extremities from magnetic resonance images (MRIs) were developed. The subject-specific model was used to analyze hip, knee and ankle muscle moment arms (MALs) and muscle-tendon lengths (MTLs) during gait in a subject with unilateral cerebral palsy (CP), and to evaluate the accuracy of widespread and commonly-used scaled generic model. It was found that the scaled generic model delivered accurate values for changes in MTLs in most muscles. However, the scaled generic and the subject-specific lower extremity musculoskeletal models showed substantial differences in MALs calculated during gait. In Paper II subject-specific musculoskeletal models of nine subjects with unilateral CP were created to study muscles volumes, MTLs and MALs; and to examine the accuracy of MALs calculated by the scaled generic models. It was shown that the scaled generic model significantly underestimated hip MALs discrepancies between the affected and the non-affected sides of the lower extremities. However, it significantly overestimated hip adduction/abduction of gluteus maximus, gluteus medius, gluteus minimus, tensor fascia latae and biceps femoris long head; and hip flexion of adductor longus and rectus femoris in the affected and the non-affected sides. It was also found that muscle volumes and hip abduction MALs in gluteus medius and gluteus minimus, hip flexion MALs in iliacus and hip rotation in gluteus maximus were smaller in the affected side of lower extremities. MTLs in the affected and the non-affected sides throughout the range of hip motion were similar. This thesis suggests the need for the subject-specific musculoskeletal models that can account for variability of muscle attachments and musculoskeletal geometry of persons with movement disorders. Based on inaccuracies of the scaled generic model reported here, the generic models that are used to guide treatment decisions must be tested, and interpreted with care. / QC 20110901
14

Hip joint forces in individuals with femoroacetabular impingement syndrome

Ismail, Karim K. 15 May 2021 (has links)
Femoroacetabular impingement syndrome (FAIS) is a disorder characterized by specific morphology of the femur and/or acetabulum, which may lead to hip pain during gait. Compared to individuals without pain, people with FAIS walk with more anterior pelvic tilt, and their pain may result from excessive anteriorly-directed hip joint forces. Previous approaches using musculoskeletal modelling to calculate joint forces, however, may inaccurately assume that each individual stands in an entirely neutral position when determining static joint angles. Consequently, information on parameters that affect joint forces (such as pelvic tilt) is lost in kinematic data used to estimate joint loading. To observe the effect of computationally altered pelvic tilt on joint forces, gait data of six healthy individuals were processed using Vicon and Visual3D. Each participant’s pelvic tilt was adjusted by ±5 degrees and ±10 degrees of tilt at all time points. Five analyses were performed per individual: no change in tilt, two posterior (positive) tilts, and two anterior (negative) tilts. The resulting data were imported into OpenSim to estimate forces from the femur onto the acetabulum in the anterior, superior, and medial directions. Data for each participant were normalized for gait cycle and body weight in MATLAB. Statistical parametric mapping software was used to determine if the differences in joint loads were significant. A more anterior pelvic tilt led to a reduction in anteriorly-directed joint forces, and an increase in the superior and medial directions. Based on these results, each individual’s pelvic tilt (obtained from their stationary kinematic data) was accounted for when modeling FAIS and healthy individuals. Using the same methods as above, the hip joint forces of 22 people with FAIS were compared to those of 22 healthy individuals as both groups walked at a prescribed speed. Although there were reductions in joint forces in both FAIS limbs compared to those of the control group, the differences were not significant, possibly due to the high variability of joint forces. Despite the significant effects of pelvic tilt on hip joint force, other underlying assumptions need to be addressed in musculoskeletal modeling software in order to compare different conditions, such as the use of the same generic model despite differences in sex and hip morphology. Future studies comparing pathological and healthy joint loads can inform researchers on gait alteration strategies and the design of assistive devices to manage the symptoms and onset of conditions such as FAIS. / 2022-05-15T00:00:00Z
15

Implications of Fatigue and Stability on Neuromuscular Control and Injury Risk in Recreational Runners

Glover, Nelson Alexander 07 December 2022 (has links)
No description available.
16

THE IMPACT OF LOWER EXTREMITY PASSIVE JOINT PROPERTIES ON STANDING FUNCTION

Amankwah, Kofi 12 April 2004 (has links)
No description available.
17

Feedback Control of a High Level Upper Extremity Neuroprosthesis

Blana, Dimitra 31 March 2008 (has links)
No description available.
18

EMG-Based Control of Upper Extremity Neuroprostheses for C5/C6 Spinal Cord Injury

Hincapie, Juan Gabriel 06 June 2008 (has links)
No description available.
19

A Comparison of Computational Methods to Predict Muscle Force during a Throwing Motion

Brown, Brandon January 2015 (has links)
No description available.
20

Muscle Co-Contraction, Joint Loading, and Fear of Movement in Individuals with Articular Cartilage Defects in the Knee

Thoma, Louise M. 08 June 2016 (has links)
No description available.

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