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Simulating ideal assistive devices to reduce the metabolic cost of walking with heavy loads

Wearable robotic devices can restore and enhance mobility. There is growing interest in designing devices that reduce the metabolic cost of walking; however, designers lack guidelines for which joints to assist and when to provide the assistance. To help address this problem, we used musculoskeletal...

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Autores principales: Dembia, Christopher L., Silder, Amy, Uchida, Thomas K., Hicks, Jennifer L., Delp, Scott L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5507502/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28700630
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0180320
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author Dembia, Christopher L.
Silder, Amy
Uchida, Thomas K.
Hicks, Jennifer L.
Delp, Scott L.
author_facet Dembia, Christopher L.
Silder, Amy
Uchida, Thomas K.
Hicks, Jennifer L.
Delp, Scott L.
author_sort Dembia, Christopher L.
collection PubMed
description Wearable robotic devices can restore and enhance mobility. There is growing interest in designing devices that reduce the metabolic cost of walking; however, designers lack guidelines for which joints to assist and when to provide the assistance. To help address this problem, we used musculoskeletal simulation to predict how hypothetical devices affect muscle activity and metabolic cost when walking with heavy loads. We explored 7 massless devices, each providing unrestricted torque at one degree of freedom in one direction (hip abduction, hip flexion, hip extension, knee flexion, knee extension, ankle plantarflexion, or ankle dorsiflexion). We used the Computed Muscle Control algorithm in OpenSim to find device torque profiles that minimized the sum of squared muscle activations while tracking measured kinematics of loaded walking without assistance. We then examined the metabolic savings provided by each device, the corresponding device torque profiles, and the resulting changes in muscle activity. We found that the hip flexion, knee flexion, and hip abduction devices provided greater metabolic savings than the ankle plantarflexion device. The hip abduction device had the greatest ratio of metabolic savings to peak instantaneous positive device power, suggesting that frontal-plane hip assistance may be an efficient way to reduce metabolic cost. Overall, the device torque profiles generally differed from the corresponding net joint moment generated by muscles without assistance, and occasionally exceeded the net joint moment to reduce muscle activity at other degrees of freedom. Many devices affected the activity of muscles elsewhere in the limb; for example, the hip flexion device affected muscles that span the ankle joint. Our results may help experimentalists decide which joint motions to target when building devices and can provide intuition for how devices may interact with the musculoskeletal system. The simulations are freely available online, allowing others to reproduce and extend our work.
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spelling pubmed-55075022017-07-25 Simulating ideal assistive devices to reduce the metabolic cost of walking with heavy loads Dembia, Christopher L. Silder, Amy Uchida, Thomas K. Hicks, Jennifer L. Delp, Scott L. PLoS One Research Article Wearable robotic devices can restore and enhance mobility. There is growing interest in designing devices that reduce the metabolic cost of walking; however, designers lack guidelines for which joints to assist and when to provide the assistance. To help address this problem, we used musculoskeletal simulation to predict how hypothetical devices affect muscle activity and metabolic cost when walking with heavy loads. We explored 7 massless devices, each providing unrestricted torque at one degree of freedom in one direction (hip abduction, hip flexion, hip extension, knee flexion, knee extension, ankle plantarflexion, or ankle dorsiflexion). We used the Computed Muscle Control algorithm in OpenSim to find device torque profiles that minimized the sum of squared muscle activations while tracking measured kinematics of loaded walking without assistance. We then examined the metabolic savings provided by each device, the corresponding device torque profiles, and the resulting changes in muscle activity. We found that the hip flexion, knee flexion, and hip abduction devices provided greater metabolic savings than the ankle plantarflexion device. The hip abduction device had the greatest ratio of metabolic savings to peak instantaneous positive device power, suggesting that frontal-plane hip assistance may be an efficient way to reduce metabolic cost. Overall, the device torque profiles generally differed from the corresponding net joint moment generated by muscles without assistance, and occasionally exceeded the net joint moment to reduce muscle activity at other degrees of freedom. Many devices affected the activity of muscles elsewhere in the limb; for example, the hip flexion device affected muscles that span the ankle joint. Our results may help experimentalists decide which joint motions to target when building devices and can provide intuition for how devices may interact with the musculoskeletal system. The simulations are freely available online, allowing others to reproduce and extend our work. Public Library of Science 2017-07-12 /pmc/articles/PMC5507502/ /pubmed/28700630 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0180320 Text en © 2017 Dembia et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Dembia, Christopher L.
Silder, Amy
Uchida, Thomas K.
Hicks, Jennifer L.
Delp, Scott L.
Simulating ideal assistive devices to reduce the metabolic cost of walking with heavy loads
title Simulating ideal assistive devices to reduce the metabolic cost of walking with heavy loads
title_full Simulating ideal assistive devices to reduce the metabolic cost of walking with heavy loads
title_fullStr Simulating ideal assistive devices to reduce the metabolic cost of walking with heavy loads
title_full_unstemmed Simulating ideal assistive devices to reduce the metabolic cost of walking with heavy loads
title_short Simulating ideal assistive devices to reduce the metabolic cost of walking with heavy loads
title_sort simulating ideal assistive devices to reduce the metabolic cost of walking with heavy loads
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5507502/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28700630
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0180320
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