Hip contact forces and gait patterns from routine activities
Hip contact forces and gait patterns from routine activities
In vivo loads acting at the hip joint have so far only been measured in few patients and without detailed documentation of gait data. Such information is required to test and improve wear, strength and fixation stability of hip implants. Measurements of hip contact forces with instrumented implants and synchronous analyses of gait patterns and ground reaction forces were performed in four patients during the most frequent activities of daily living. From the individual data sets an average was calculated. The paper focuses on the loading of the femoral implant component but complete data are additionally stored on an associated compact disc. It contains complete gait and hip contact force data as well as calculated muscle activities during walking and stair climbing and the frequencies of daily activities observed in hip patients. The mechanical loading and function of the hip joint and proximal femur is thereby completely documented. The average patient loaded his hip joint with 238% BW (percent of body weight) when walking at about 4 km/h and with slightly less when standing on one leg. This is below the levels previously reported for two other patients (Bergmann et al., Clinical Biomechanics 26 (1993) 969-990). When climbing upstairs the joint contact force is 251% BW which is less than 260% BW when going downstairs. Inwards torsion of the implant is probably critical for the stem fixation. On average it is 23% larger when going upstairs than during normal level walking. The inter- and intra-individual variations during stair climbing are large and the highest torque values are 83% larger than during normal walking. Because the hip joint loading during all other common activities of most hip patients are comparably small (except during stumbling), implants should mainly be tested with loading conditions that mimic walking and stair climbing.
activities of daily living, aged, biomechanics, female, gait physiology, hip joint physiopathology, hip prosthesis, human, male, middle age, movement, support, non-u.s. gov't, telemetry
859-871
Bergmann, G.
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Deuretzbacher, G.
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Heller, M.
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Graichen, F.
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Rohlmann, A.
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Strauss, J.
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Duda, G.N.
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July 2001
Bergmann, G.
0e5e06cd-2009-449f-a27c-4bcae0968a2f
Deuretzbacher, G.
787ca7f1-91ad-4aac-ba1c-5d6da7102364
Heller, M.
3da19d2a-f34d-4ff1-8a34-9b5a7e695829
Graichen, F.
d00944ed-eb6c-4262-9c04-100b4043bd31
Rohlmann, A.
3cea4cf8-5409-4adc-b889-2ad41e83c51a
Strauss, J.
c6785597-5344-4895-894c-46b59d044e7a
Duda, G.N.
32d09622-34ad-49dd-8314-3f61c99a764e
Bergmann, G., Deuretzbacher, G., Heller, M., Graichen, F., Rohlmann, A., Strauss, J. and Duda, G.N.
(2001)
Hip contact forces and gait patterns from routine activities.
Journal of Biomechanics, 34 (7), .
(PMID:11410170)
Abstract
In vivo loads acting at the hip joint have so far only been measured in few patients and without detailed documentation of gait data. Such information is required to test and improve wear, strength and fixation stability of hip implants. Measurements of hip contact forces with instrumented implants and synchronous analyses of gait patterns and ground reaction forces were performed in four patients during the most frequent activities of daily living. From the individual data sets an average was calculated. The paper focuses on the loading of the femoral implant component but complete data are additionally stored on an associated compact disc. It contains complete gait and hip contact force data as well as calculated muscle activities during walking and stair climbing and the frequencies of daily activities observed in hip patients. The mechanical loading and function of the hip joint and proximal femur is thereby completely documented. The average patient loaded his hip joint with 238% BW (percent of body weight) when walking at about 4 km/h and with slightly less when standing on one leg. This is below the levels previously reported for two other patients (Bergmann et al., Clinical Biomechanics 26 (1993) 969-990). When climbing upstairs the joint contact force is 251% BW which is less than 260% BW when going downstairs. Inwards torsion of the implant is probably critical for the stem fixation. On average it is 23% larger when going upstairs than during normal level walking. The inter- and intra-individual variations during stair climbing are large and the highest torque values are 83% larger than during normal walking. Because the hip joint loading during all other common activities of most hip patients are comparably small (except during stumbling), implants should mainly be tested with loading conditions that mimic walking and stair climbing.
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Published date: July 2001
Keywords:
activities of daily living, aged, biomechanics, female, gait physiology, hip joint physiopathology, hip prosthesis, human, male, middle age, movement, support, non-u.s. gov't, telemetry
Organisations:
Bioengineering Group
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Local EPrints ID: 348485
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/348485
ISSN: 0021-9290
PURE UUID: 1360971a-287a-43de-afce-43651eb0a483
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Date deposited: 26 Feb 2013 10:10
Last modified: 23 Jul 2022 02:05
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Contributors
Author:
G. Bergmann
Author:
G. Deuretzbacher
Author:
F. Graichen
Author:
A. Rohlmann
Author:
J. Strauss
Author:
G.N. Duda
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