4.5 Article

Validation of a musculoskeletal model to investigate hip joint mechanics in response to dynamic multiplanar tasks

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOMECHANICS
Volume 158, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2023.111767

Keywords

Musculoskeletal model; Hip; Hip contact forces; Muscle activations; Validation

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This study modified an existing musculoskeletal model to simulate hip joint motion and validated it against experimental data. The results showed that the modified model accurately estimated hip contact forces and muscle activations in response to various dynamic tasks among young adults. The differences in hip contact forces and muscle activations between young adults and previously studied patients may be attributed to different movement patterns.
Existing hip-focused musculoskeletal (MSK) models are limited by the hip range of motion, hip musculature detail, or have only been qualitatively validated. The purposes of this study were to: i) modify the existing 2396Hip MSK model to simulate dynamic tasks with multiplanar hip joint motion; and ii) validate the modified MSK model quantitatively against experimental data. Experimental data was collected from five healthy adults (age = 25 [6] years, two females) during eight movement tasks. The motion and ground reaction force data were input into the MSK modeling software OpenSim to calculate muscle activations and hip contact forces (HCFs). The HCFs were compared to experimental HCFs previously measured in total hip arthroplasty (THA) patients using instrumented hip prostheses. A gait simulation was performed using data from one THA patient to directly assess the model's accuracy in estimating HCFs. The young adults' modeled and experimental muscle activations for seven muscles were compared using a cross-correlation function. The model only overestimated the peak resultant HCFs by 0.06-0.08 N/BW compared to the experimentally measured HCFs of the THA patient. The young adults' HCFs were over two standard deviations higher than previously measured in the THA patients, which is likely a result of different movement patterns. The correlation coefficients indicated strong correlations between experimental and modeled muscle activations in 50 of the 56 comparisons. The results of this study suggest the new MSK model is an appropriate method to quantify HCFs and muscle activations in response to dynamic, multiplanar tasks among young, healthy adults.

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