Musculo-skeletal loading conditions at the hip during walking and stair climbing.

Standard

Musculo-skeletal loading conditions at the hip during walking and stair climbing. / Heller, M O; Bergmann, G; Deuretzbacher, Georg; Dürselen, L; Pohl, M; Claes, L; Haas, N P; Duda, G N.

In: J BIOMECH, Vol. 34, No. 7, 7, 2001, p. 883-893.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Heller, MO, Bergmann, G, Deuretzbacher, G, Dürselen, L, Pohl, M, Claes, L, Haas, NP & Duda, GN 2001, 'Musculo-skeletal loading conditions at the hip during walking and stair climbing.', J BIOMECH, vol. 34, no. 7, 7, pp. 883-893. <http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11410172?dopt=Citation>

APA

Heller, M. O., Bergmann, G., Deuretzbacher, G., Dürselen, L., Pohl, M., Claes, L., Haas, N. P., & Duda, G. N. (2001). Musculo-skeletal loading conditions at the hip during walking and stair climbing. J BIOMECH, 34(7), 883-893. [7]. http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11410172?dopt=Citation

Vancouver

Heller MO, Bergmann G, Deuretzbacher G, Dürselen L, Pohl M, Claes L et al. Musculo-skeletal loading conditions at the hip during walking and stair climbing. J BIOMECH. 2001;34(7):883-893. 7.

Bibtex

@article{69db6937d4994e21a47fc68ef0fca40f,
title = "Musculo-skeletal loading conditions at the hip during walking and stair climbing.",
abstract = "Musculo-skeletal loading plays an important role in the primary stability of joint replacements and in the biological processes involved in fracture healing. However, current knowledge of musculo-skeletal loading is still limited. In the past, a number of musculo-skeletal models have been developed to estimate loading conditions at the hip. So far, a cycle-to-cycle validation of predicted musculo-skeletal loading by in vivo measurements has not been possible. The aim of this study was to determine the musculo-skeletal loading conditions during walking and climbing stairs for a number of patients and compare these findings to in vivo data.Following total hip arthroplasty, four patients underwent gait analysis during walking and stair climbing. An instrumented femoral prosthesis enabled simultaneous measurement of in vivo hip contact forces. On the basis of CT and X-ray data, individual musculo-skeletal models of the lower extremity were developed for each patient. Muscle and joint contact forces were calculated using an optimization algorithm. The calculated peak hip contact forces both over- and under-estimated the measured forces. They differed by a mean of 12% during walking and 14% during stair climbing.For the first time, a cycle-to-cycle validation of predicted musculo-skeletal loading was possible for walking and climbing stairs in several patients. In all cases, the comparison of in vivo measured and calculated hip contact forces showed good agreement.Thus, the authors consider the presented approach as a useful means to determine valid conditions for the analysis of prosthesis loading, bone modeling or remodeling processes around implants and fracture stability following internal fixation.",
author = "Heller, {M O} and G Bergmann and Georg Deuretzbacher and L D{\"u}rselen and M Pohl and L Claes and Haas, {N P} and Duda, {G N}",
year = "2001",
language = "Deutsch",
volume = "34",
pages = "883--893",
journal = "J BIOMECH",
issn = "0021-9290",
publisher = "Elsevier Limited",
number = "7",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Musculo-skeletal loading conditions at the hip during walking and stair climbing.

AU - Heller, M O

AU - Bergmann, G

AU - Deuretzbacher, Georg

AU - Dürselen, L

AU - Pohl, M

AU - Claes, L

AU - Haas, N P

AU - Duda, G N

PY - 2001

Y1 - 2001

N2 - Musculo-skeletal loading plays an important role in the primary stability of joint replacements and in the biological processes involved in fracture healing. However, current knowledge of musculo-skeletal loading is still limited. In the past, a number of musculo-skeletal models have been developed to estimate loading conditions at the hip. So far, a cycle-to-cycle validation of predicted musculo-skeletal loading by in vivo measurements has not been possible. The aim of this study was to determine the musculo-skeletal loading conditions during walking and climbing stairs for a number of patients and compare these findings to in vivo data.Following total hip arthroplasty, four patients underwent gait analysis during walking and stair climbing. An instrumented femoral prosthesis enabled simultaneous measurement of in vivo hip contact forces. On the basis of CT and X-ray data, individual musculo-skeletal models of the lower extremity were developed for each patient. Muscle and joint contact forces were calculated using an optimization algorithm. The calculated peak hip contact forces both over- and under-estimated the measured forces. They differed by a mean of 12% during walking and 14% during stair climbing.For the first time, a cycle-to-cycle validation of predicted musculo-skeletal loading was possible for walking and climbing stairs in several patients. In all cases, the comparison of in vivo measured and calculated hip contact forces showed good agreement.Thus, the authors consider the presented approach as a useful means to determine valid conditions for the analysis of prosthesis loading, bone modeling or remodeling processes around implants and fracture stability following internal fixation.

AB - Musculo-skeletal loading plays an important role in the primary stability of joint replacements and in the biological processes involved in fracture healing. However, current knowledge of musculo-skeletal loading is still limited. In the past, a number of musculo-skeletal models have been developed to estimate loading conditions at the hip. So far, a cycle-to-cycle validation of predicted musculo-skeletal loading by in vivo measurements has not been possible. The aim of this study was to determine the musculo-skeletal loading conditions during walking and climbing stairs for a number of patients and compare these findings to in vivo data.Following total hip arthroplasty, four patients underwent gait analysis during walking and stair climbing. An instrumented femoral prosthesis enabled simultaneous measurement of in vivo hip contact forces. On the basis of CT and X-ray data, individual musculo-skeletal models of the lower extremity were developed for each patient. Muscle and joint contact forces were calculated using an optimization algorithm. The calculated peak hip contact forces both over- and under-estimated the measured forces. They differed by a mean of 12% during walking and 14% during stair climbing.For the first time, a cycle-to-cycle validation of predicted musculo-skeletal loading was possible for walking and climbing stairs in several patients. In all cases, the comparison of in vivo measured and calculated hip contact forces showed good agreement.Thus, the authors consider the presented approach as a useful means to determine valid conditions for the analysis of prosthesis loading, bone modeling or remodeling processes around implants and fracture stability following internal fixation.

M3 - SCORING: Zeitschriftenaufsatz

VL - 34

SP - 883

EP - 893

JO - J BIOMECH

JF - J BIOMECH

SN - 0021-9290

IS - 7

M1 - 7

ER -