Affiliation:
1. Integrative Physiology, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO, USA
2. VA Eastern Colorado Health Care System, Denver, CO, USA
Abstract
The muscles surrounding the ankle, knee and hip joints provide 42, 16 and 42%, respectively, of the total leg positive power required to walk on level ground at various speeds. However, each joint's contribution to leg work when walking up/downhill at a range of speeds is not known. Determining each biological joint's contribution to leg work over a range of speeds and slopes can inform the design of biomimetic assistive devices (i.e. prostheses). Twenty healthy adults walked 1.00, 1.25 and 1.50 m s
−1
on 0°, ±3°, ±6° and ±9° while we collected kinematic and kinetic data. We calculated sagittal plane joint work and individual leg work over the entire stance phase. The ratio of ankle joint to total individual leg positive work (summed ankle, knee and hip joint work) did not change (0.42) with speed or slope, but the ratio of ankle joint to individual leg negative work was 0.38 at −9°, 0.42 at 0° and 0.27 at +9° across all speeds. The ratio of ankle joint to total individual leg negative work was 0.41 at 1.00 m s
−1
and 0.32 at 1.50 m s
−1
across all slopes. The ratio of knee joint to total individual positive leg work (0.22) did not change with speed or slope. The ratio of knee joint to total individual leg negative work was 0.39 at 1.00 m s
−1
and 0.45 at 1.50 m s
−1
across all slopes. The ratio of hip joint to total individual leg positive work did not change with speed but was 0.34 at −9°, 0.33 at 0° and 0.37 at +9° across all speeds. The ratio of hip joint to total individual leg negative work was 0.21 at 1.00 m s
−1
, and 0.24 at 1.50 m s
−1
across all slopes and 0.17 at −9°, 0.19 at 0° and 0.29 at +9° across all speeds. The ankle significantly contributes to walking on slopes and this contribution changes during sloped compared with level-ground walking, thus assistive devices that provide biomimetic ankle function must adapt to accommodate walking at different speeds and slopes; whereas assistive biomimetic devices for the knee only need to adapt at different speeds.
Funder
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
Reference50 articles.
1. Mechanical work in terrestrial locomotion: two basic mechanisms for minimizing energy expenditure
2. The sources of external work in level walking and running.
3. Biomechanics of walking and running: from center of mass movement to muscle action;Farley CT;Exerc. Sport Sci. Rev.,1998
4. Energetic consequences of walking like an inverted pendulum: step-to-step transitions;Kuo AD;Am. Coll. Sports Med.,2005
5. Muscles do more positive than negative work in human locomotion
Cited by
57 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献