Femur/femoral neck load estimation during stair navigation

dc.contributor.advisor Timothy R. Derrick
dc.contributor.advisor Jason C. Gillette
dc.contributor.author Deng, Chen
dc.contributor.department Kinesiology
dc.date 2018-08-11T08:40:03.000
dc.date.accessioned 2020-06-30T03:10:26Z
dc.date.available 2020-06-30T03:10:26Z
dc.date.copyright Tue May 01 00:00:00 UTC 2018
dc.date.embargo 2001-01-01
dc.date.issued 2018-01-01
dc.description.abstract <p>Project 1:</p> <p>Femoral neck is of particular concern in the hip fractures and aging. A better understanding of the hip loading environment is helpful for the hip fracture prevention, rehabilitation, and the design of osteogenic exercises. This study was to compare the femoral neck stresses between young and older adults during stair ascent and descent, and to identify the contribution of muscle and reaction forces to the stress. Motion analysis and inverse dynamics method, musculoskeletal and elliptical femoral neck cross-section models were used to estimate stress on the femoral neck. During stair ascent, a significantly increased tension at the superior site was found for young group at the first peak (young: 13.5à ±6.1 MPa, old: 4.2à ±6.5 MPa, p < 0.001), and a significantly increased compression at the posterior site for old group at the second peak (young: -11.4à ±4.9 MPa, old: -18.1à ±8.6 MPa, p = 0.006). The stresses produced by muscle and reaction forces were reported for all 4 surfaces of the femoral neck. The loading of the proximal femur as assessed from stresses and their component provided loading information on the bone structure. Understanding this information can provide the researcher with a more comprehensive view of the loading on the bone tissues in the hip region.</p> <p>Project 2:</p> <p>Understanding the hip loading environment during daily activity is necessary for the understanding of hip fractures and the design of osteogenic exercises. Using the finite element femur model, the purpose of this study was to estimate the femoral strains at 9 cross-sections along the long axis of femur for stair ascent and descent at the hip contact force peaks. All subjects (both young and older groups) performed 5 trials of stair ascent and 5 trials of descent with a 3-step staircase. For the compressive strains, stair descent generated greater compressive strains than ascent for all cross-sections (except the 8th cross-section) during both hip joint contact force peak 1 and peak 2. For the tensile strains, stair descent generated greater tensile strains than ascent for most cross-sections during both hip joint contact force peak 1 (the 1st to 6th, and the 9th cross-sections) and peak 2 (the 1st to 6th, the 7th, and the 9th cross-sections). Strains were analyzed in this study, which represents the material deformation effect on the bone due to the sum of all the bone external loads. Using bone strains could help future studies analyze loading conditions in a more comprehensive way for other physical activities, which predicts the risk of stress fractures and tests if some alternative methods (gait type change) could reduce stress and strain effectively.</p> <p>Project 3:</p> <p>For older population, development of hip fracture and pain prevention, and the design of osteogenic exercise need better understanding of the hip joint loading environment during daily activities. Using the motion analysis and inverse dynamics methods, combined with musculoskeletal modelling, static optimization, and finite element femur model, this study is to compare the femoral neck strains between stair ascent and descent, young and older populations. The strains at the femoral neck cross-section were greater for stair descent than ascent for young (Compressive: peak 1 descent -806.6à ±363.6 à µε, ascent -500.1à ±137.5 à µε, p<0.001; peak 2 descent -679.3à ±301.2 à µε, ascent -401.8à ±132.7 à µε, p<0.001; Tensile: peak 1 descent 339.3à ±195.0 à µε, ascent 176.8à ±68.5 à µε, p=0.001; peak 2 descent 259.0à ±99.3 à µε, ascent 123.9à ±46.7 à µε, p=0.004) and older groups (Compressive: peak 1 descent -564.7à ±177.2 à µε, ascent -403.6à ±144.8 à µε, p=0.006; peak 2 descent -503.3à ±155.9 à µε, ascent -386.3à ±127.7 à µε, p<0.001; Tensile: peak 1 descent 236.7à ±105.3 à µε, ascent 136.1à ±65.3 à µε, p=0.003; peak 2 descent 208.7à ±75.1 à µε, ascent 126.0à ±46.5 à µε, p<0.001). Strain represents the material deformation of the bone due to the sum of all the external loads. Using bone strains could analyze bone loading in more comprehensive ways during physical activities, which predicts the risk of stress fractures and tests the possible preventative methods.</p> <p>Project 4:</p> <p>This research focused on stair descent to explore the loading environment of the femoral neck, and develop some methods which might reduce femoral neck loads in the daily activities. Using the motion analysis and inverse dynamics methods, combined with musculoskeletal modelling, static optimization, and finite element femur model, maximum compressive and tensile strains were tested at the femoral neck using different gait types (step over step, step by step) and different external weight carrying strategies (10% of body weight at ipsilateral side, 10% at contralateral side) during stair descent. There is no significant Pearson Correlation between age and femoral neck strains. The best Pearson Correlation (R=-0.282) between age and compressive strain was found for the condition of step-over-step with external weight at the ipsilateral side during the 2nd peak of hip joint contact force. Compared with step-over-step, the compressive strain was significantly reduced for step-by-step with the trailing leg for the 1st peak (trailing: -739.6à ±184.0 à µε, step-over-step: -852.1à ±213.9 à µε, p<0.001, d=0.70). Contralateral side weight carrying increased both compressive and tensile strains for both step-over-step and step-by-step strategies than ipsilateral. In general, applying step-by-step method for the trailing leg and avoid external weight carrying at contralateral side could be effective to reduce femoral neck strains.</p>
dc.format.mimetype application/pdf
dc.identifier archive/lib.dr.iastate.edu/etd/16342/
dc.identifier.articleid 7349
dc.identifier.contextkey 12318578
dc.identifier.doi https://doi.org/10.31274/etd-180810-5972
dc.identifier.s3bucket isulib-bepress-aws-west
dc.identifier.submissionpath etd/16342
dc.identifier.uri https://dr.lib.iastate.edu/handle/20.500.12876/30525
dc.language.iso en
dc.source.bitstream archive/lib.dr.iastate.edu/etd/16342/Deng_iastate_0097E_17265.pdf|||Fri Jan 14 20:58:44 UTC 2022
dc.subject.disciplines Kinesiology
dc.subject.keywords Bone load estimation
dc.subject.keywords Bone model
dc.subject.keywords Femoral neck
dc.subject.keywords Femur
dc.subject.keywords Stair ascent and descent
dc.title Femur/femoral neck load estimation during stair navigation
dc.type article
dc.type.genre dissertation
dspace.entity.type Publication
relation.isOrgUnitOfPublication f7b0f2ca-8e43-4084-8a10-75f62e5199dd
thesis.degree.discipline Kinesiology
thesis.degree.level dissertation
thesis.degree.name Doctor of Philosophy
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