4.5 Article

Effect of obesity on spinal loads during load-reaching activities: A subject-and kinematics-specific musculoskeletal modeling approach

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JOURNAL OF BIOMECHANICS
卷 161, 期 -, 页码 -

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ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2023.111770

关键词

Obesity; Spinal loads; Subject-specific; Kinematics; Musculoskeletal models

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Obese individuals experience greater spinal loads during load-reaching activities, even when accounting for kinematic differences. Postural differences alone are ineffective in compensating the greater spinal loads that obese people experience.
Obesity has been associated to increase the risk of low back disorders. Previous musculoskeletal models simulating the effect of body weight on intervertebral joint loads have assumed identical body postures for obese and normal-weight individuals during a given physical activity. Our recent kinematic-measurement studies, however, indicate that obese individuals adapt different body postures (segmental orientations) than normal-weight ones when performing load-reaching activities. The present study, therefore, used a subject- and kinematics-specific musculoskeletal modeling approach to compare spinal loads of nine normal-weight and nine obese individuals each performing twelve static two-handed load-reaching activities at different hand heights, anterior distances, and asymmetry angles (total of 12 tasks x 18 subjects = 216 model simulations). Each model incorporated personalized muscle architectures, body mass distributions, and full-body kinematics for each subject and task. Results indicated that even when accounting for subject-specific body kinematics obese individuals experienced significantly larger (by similar to 38% in average) L5-S1 compression (2305 +/- 468 N versus 1674 +/- 337 N) and shear (508 +/- 111 N versus 705 +/- 150 N) loads during all reaching activities (p < 0.05 for all hand positions). This average difference of similar to 38% was similar to the results obtained from previous modeling investigations that neglected kinematics differences between the two weight groups. Moreover, there was no significant interaction effect between body weight and hand position on the spinal loads; indicating that the effect of body weight on L5-S1 loads was not dependent on the position of hands. Postural differences alone appear, hence, ineffective in compensating the greater spinal loads that obese people experience during reaching activities.

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