DocumentCode :
1501096
Title :
Increased risk for falling associated with obesity: mathematical modeling of postural control
Author :
Corbeil, Philippe ; Simoneau, Martin ; Rancourt, Denis ; Tremblay, Angelo ; Teasdale, Normand
Author_Institution :
Div. of Kinesiology, Laval Univ., Que., Canada
Volume :
9
Issue :
2
fYear :
2001
fDate :
6/1/2001 12:00:00 AM
Firstpage :
126
Lastpage :
136
Abstract :
Recent epidemiological studies report that obesity is positively related to fracture incidence. In the present experiment, a model of postural control was used to examine the impact of an abnormal distribution of body fat in the abdominal area upon postural stability. Obese and lightweight humanoids were destabilized by imposing a small initial angular speed from a neutral standing position. To avoid a loss of stability yielding a stepping reaction or a fall, an ankle torque is necessary to counteract the perturbation. Three torque parameters-ankle torque onset, time to peak torque, and muscular ankle torque-were entered in a program to simulate the intrinsic variability of the human postural control system. A loss of stability was detected when the center of pressure exceeded stability margins. The most striking observation is the nonlinear increase of torque needed to stabilize the humanoid when the motor response was chararterized by delayed temporal parameters. The effect was more pronounced when an anterior position of the center of mass was included in the simulations. This suggests that, when submitted to daily postural stresses and perturbations, obese persons (particularly those with an abnormal distribution of body fat in the abdominal area) may be at higher risk of falling than lightweight individuals.
Keywords :
biocontrol; biomechanics; health hazards; mechanical stability; mechanical variables control; physiological models; abnormal body fat distribution; ankle torque onset; daily postural stresses; delayed temporal parameters; epidemiological studies; fracture incidence; increased falling risk; lightweight humanoids; mathematical modeling; muscular ankle torque; obesity; postural control; stability margins; time to peak torque; Abdomen; Biological system modeling; Control system synthesis; Delay; Hip; Humans; Mathematical model; Stability; Stress; Torque control; Abdomen; Accidental Falls; Adipose Tissue; Models, Theoretical; Obesity; Posture; Risk Assessment; Torque;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Neural Systems and Rehabilitation Engineering, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
1534-4320
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/7333.928572
Filename :
928572
Link To Document :
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