Computational Prediction of Muscle Moments During ARED Squat Exercise on the International Space Station

Author:

Fregly Benjamin J.1,Fregly Christopher D.2,Kim Brandon T.2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of Florida, 231 MAE-A Building, P.O. Box 116250, Gainesville, FL 32611 e-mail:

2. International Baccalaureate Program, Eastside High School, 1201 Southeast 43rd Street, Gainesville, FL 32641 e-mail:

Abstract

Prevention of muscle atrophy caused by reduced mechanical loading in microgravity conditions remains a challenge for long-duration spaceflight. To combat leg muscle atrophy, astronauts on the International Space Station (ISS) often perform squat exercise using the Advanced Resistive Exercise Device (ARED). While the ARED is effective at building muscle strength and volume on Earth, NASA researchers do not know how closely ARED squat exercise on the ISS replicates Earth-level squat muscle moments, or how small variations in exercise form affect muscle loading. This study used dynamic simulations of ARED squat exercise on the ISS to address these two questions. A multibody dynamic model of the complete astronaut-ARED system was constructed in OpenSim. With the ARED base locked to ground and gravity set to 9.81 m/s2, we validated the model by reproducing muscle moments, ground reaction forces, and foot center of pressure (CoP) positions for ARED squat exercise on Earth. With the ARED base free to move relative to the ISS and gravity set to zero, we then used the validated model to simulate ARED squat exercise on the ISS for a reference squat motion and eight altered squat motions involving changes in anterior–posterior (AP) foot or CoP position on the ARED footplate. The reference squat motion closely reproduced Earth-level muscle moments for all joints except the ankle. For the altered squat motions, changing the foot position was more effective at altering muscle moments than was changing the CoP position. All CoP adjustments introduced an undesirable shear foot reaction force that could cause the feet to slip on the ARED footplate, while some foot and CoP adjustments introduced an undesirable sagittal plane foot reaction moment that would cause the astronaut to rotate off the ARED footplate without the use of some type of foot fixation. Our results provide potentially useful information for achieving desired increases or decreases in specific muscle moments during ARED squat exercise performed on the ISS.

Publisher

ASME International

Subject

Physiology (medical),Biomedical Engineering

Reference21 articles.

1. Dickey, B., 2008, “Outposts on the Moon, Footprints on Mars: NASA's Future Exploration Plans,” NASA 50th Magazine—50 Years of Exploration and Discovery, http://www.nasa.gov/50th/50th_magazine/futureExploration.html

2. Muscle Volume, Strength, Endurance, and Exercise Loads During 6-Month Missions in Space;Aviat. Space Environ. Med.,2010

3. Foot Forces During Exercise on the International Space Station;J. Biomech.,2010

4. Exercise in Space: Human Skeletal Muscle After 6 Months Aboard the International Space Station;J. Appl. Physiol.,2009

5. Prolonged Space Flight-Induced Alterations in the Structure and Function of Human Skeletal Muscle Fibres;J. Physiol.,2010

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