Influence of the hip joint modeling approaches on the kinematics of human gait


Autoria(s): Costa, João P. Morais; Peixoto, Joaquim Jorge Gomes; Moreira, Pedro; Souto, A. Pedro; Flores, Paulo; Lankarani, Hamid M.
Data(s)

2016

Resumo

The influence of the hip joint formulation on the kinematic response of the model of human gait is investigated throughout this work. To accomplish this goal, the fundamental issues of the modeling process of a planar hip joint under the framework of multibody systems are revisited. In particular, the formulations for the ideal, dry, and lubricated revolute joints are described and utilized for the interaction of femur head inside acetabulum or the hip bone. In this process, the main kinematic and dynamic aspects of hip joints are analyzed. In a simple manner, the forces that are generated during human gait, for both dry and lubricated hip joint models, are computed in terms of the system’s state variables and subsequently introduced into the dynamics equations of motion of the multibody system as external generalized forces. Moreover, a human multibody model is considered, which incorporates the different approaches for the hip articulation, namely ideal joint, dry, and lubricated models. Finally, several computational simulations based on different approaches are performed, and the main results presented and compared to identify differences among the methodologies and procedures adopted in this work. The input conditions to the models correspond to the experimental data capture from an adult male during normal gait. In general, the obtained results in terms of positions do not differ significantly when the different hip joint models are considered. In sharp contrast, the velocity and acceleration plotted vary significantly. The effect of the hip joint modeling approach is clearly measurable and visible in terms of peaks and oscillations of the velocities and accelerations. In general, with the dry hip model, intra-joint force peaks can be observed, which can be associated with the multiple impacts between the femur head and the cup. In turn, when the lubricant is present, the system’s response tends to be smoother due to the damping effects of the synovial fluid.

The first and third authors express their gratitude to the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology for the PhD grants SFRH/BD/76573/2011 and SFRH/BD/64477/2009, respectively. The authors would like to thank to the Portuguese Foundation for Science and Technology through the project UID/EEA/04436/2013. The authors are also gratefully acknowledge the financial support from QREN (Quadro de Referência Estratégico Nacional - National Strategic Reference Framework), for this study “INOVSHOES - Padronizar para Customizar Calçado Ortopédico”, project n.º 2010/12032.

Identificador

0742-4787

1528-8897

http://hdl.handle.net/1822/40018

10.1115/1.4031988

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

American Society of Mechanical Engineers

Relação

SFRH/BD/76573/2011

SFRH/BD/64477/2009

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Palavras-Chave #Hip articulation #Ideal joint #Dry joint #Lubricated joint #Kinematics #Dynamics #Multibody model
Tipo

info:eu-repo/semantics/article