Title of article
Knee and hip kinetics during normal stair climbing
Author/Authors
Patrick A. Costigan، نويسنده , , Kevin J. Deluzio، نويسنده , , Urs P. Wyss، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2002
Pages
7
From page
31
To page
37
Abstract
Understanding joint kinetics during activities of daily living furthers our understanding of the factors involved in joint pathology and the effects of treatment. In this study, we examined hip and knee joint kinetics during stair climbing in 35 young healthy subjects using a subject-specific knee model to estimate bone-on-bone tibiofemoral and patello-femoral joint contact forces. The net knee forces were below one body weight while the peak posterior–anterior contact force was close to one body weight. The peak distal–proximal contact force was on average 3 times body weight and could be as high as 6 times body weight. These contact forces occurred at a high degree of knee flexion where there is a smaller joint contact area resulting in high contact stresses. The peak knee adduction moment was 0.42 (0.15) N m/kg while the flexion moment was 1.16 (0.24) N m/kg. Similar peak moment values, but different curve profiles, were found for the hip. The hip and knee posterio-anterior shear forces and the knee flexion moment were higher during stair climbing than during level walking. The most striking difference between stair ascent and level walking was that the peak patello-femoral contact force was 8 times higher during stair ascent. These data can be used as baseline measures in pathology studies, as input to theoretical joint models, and as input to mechanical joint simulators.
Keywords
Hip , forces , Moments , Contact forces , Patella , Gait , Stairs , KNEE
Journal title
Gait and Posture
Serial Year
2002
Journal title
Gait and Posture
Record number
487958
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