Influence of the Musculotendon Dynamics on the Muscle Force-Sharing Problem of the Shoulder—A Fully Inverse Dynamics Approach

Author:

Carlos Quental1,Margarida Azevedo2,Jorge Ambrósio3,S. B. Gonçalves4,João Folgado5

Affiliation:

1. IDMEC,Instituto Superior Técnico,Universidade de Lisboa,Av. Rovisco Pais 1,Lisboa 1049-001, Portugale-mail: carlos.quental@tecnico.ulisboa.pt

2. IDMEC,Instituto Superior Técnico,Universidade de Lisboa,Av. Rovisco Pais 1,Lisboa 1049-001, Portugale-mail: margarida.azevedo@tecnico.ulisboa.pt

3. IDMEC,Instituto Superior Técnico,Universidade de Lisboa,Av. Rovisco Pais 1,Lisboa 1049-001, Portugale-mail: jorge.ambrosio@tecnico.ulisboa.pt

4. IDMEC,Instituto Superior Técnico,Universidade de Lisboa,Av. Rovisco Pais 1,Lisboa 1049-001, Portugale-mail: sergio.goncalves@tecnico.ulisboa.pt

5. IDMEC,Instituto Superior Técnico,Universidade de Lisboa,Av. Rovisco Pais 1,Lisboa 1049-001 Portugale-mail: jfolgado@tecnico.ulisboa.pt

Abstract

Abstract Most dynamic simulations are based on inverse dynamics, being the time-dependent physiological nature of the muscle properties rarely considered due to numerical challenges. Since the influence of muscle physiology on the consistency of inverse dynamics simulations remains unclear, the purpose of the present study is to evaluate the computational efficiency and biological validity of four musculotendon models that differ in the simulation of the muscle activation and contraction dynamics. Inverse dynamic analyses are performed using a spatial musculoskeletal model of the upper limb. The muscle force-sharing problem is solved for five repetitions of unloaded and loaded motions of shoulder abduction and shoulder flexion. The performance of the musculotendon models is evaluated by comparing muscle activation predictions with electromyography (EMG) signals, measured synchronously with motion for 11 muscles, and the glenohumeral joint reaction forces estimated numerically with those measured in vivo. The results show similar muscle activations for all muscle models. Overall, high cross-correlations are computed between muscle activations and the EMG signals measured for all movements analyzed, which provides confidence in the results. The glenohumeral joint reaction forces estimated compare well with those measured in vivo, but the influence of the muscle dynamics is found to be negligible. In conclusion, for slow-speed, standard movements of the upper limb, as those studied here, the activation and musculotendon contraction dynamics can be neglected in inverse dynamic analyses without compromising the prediction of muscle and joint reaction forces.

Funder

Fundação para a Ciência e a Tecnologia

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Physiology (medical),Biomedical Engineering

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