Comparison of a Scaled Cadaver-Based Musculoskeletal Model With a Clinical Upper Extremity Model

Author:

Nagaraja Vikranth H.1,Bergmann Jeroen H. M.1,Andersen Michael S.2,Thompson Mark S.1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Engineering Science, Institute of Biomedical Engineering, University of Oxford , Oxford OX1 3PJ, UK

2. Department of Materials and Production, Aalborg University , Fibigerstraede 16, Aalborg East DK-9220, Denmark

Abstract

Abstract Reliably and accurately estimating joint/segmental kinematics from optical motion capture data has remained challenging. Studies objectively characterizing human movement patterns have typically involved inverse kinematics and inverse dynamics techniques. Subsequent research has included scaled cadaver-based musculoskeletal (MSK) modeling for noninvasively estimating joint and muscle loads. As one of the ways to enhance confidence in the validity of MSK model predictions, the kinematics from the preceding step that drives such a model needs to be checked for agreement or compared with established/widely used models. This study rigorously compares the upper extremity (UE) joint kinematics calculated by the Dutch Shoulder Model implemented in the AnyBody Managed Model Repository (involving multibody kinematics optimization (MKO)) with those estimated by the Vicon Plug-in Gait model (involving single-body kinematics optimization (SKO)). Ten subjects performed three trials of (different types of) reaching tasks in a three-dimensional marker-based optical motion capture laboratory setting. Joint angles, processed marker trajectories, and reconstruction residuals corresponding to both models were compared. Scatter plots and Bland–Altman plots were used to assess the agreement between the two model outputs. Results showed the largest differences between the two models for shoulder, followed by elbow and wrist, with all root-mean-squared differences less than 10 deg (although this limit might be unacceptable for clinical use). Strong-to-excellent Spearman's rank correlation coefficients were found between the two model outputs. The Bland–Altman plots showed a good agreement between most of the outputs. In conclusion, results indicate that these two models with different kinematic algorithms broadly agree with each other, albeit with few key differences.

Funder

Research Councils UK

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Physiology (medical),Biomedical Engineering

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