The effect of active exoskeleton support with different lumbar-to-hip support ratios on spinal musculoskeletal loading and lumbar kinematics during lifting.

IF 2.8 Q2 ENGINEERING, BIOMEDICAL Wearable technologies Pub Date : 2024-12-23 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1017/wtc.2024.7
Niels P Brouwer, Ali Tabasi, Feng Hu, Idsart Kingma, Wietse van Dijk, Mohamed Irfan Mohamed Refai, Herman van der Kooij, Jaap H van Dieën
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Abstract

While active back-support exoskeletons can reduce mechanical loading of the spine, current designs include only one pair of actuated hip joints combined with a rigid structure between the pelvis and trunk attachments, restricting lumbar flexion and consequently intended lifting behavior. This study presents a novel active exoskeleton including actuated lumbar and hip joints as well as subject-specific exoskeleton control based on a real-time active low-back moment estimation. We evaluated the effect of exoskeleton support with different lumbar-to-hip (L/H) support ratios on spine loading, lumbar kinematics, and back muscle electromyography (EMG). Eight healthy males lifted 15 kg loads using three techniques without exoskeleton (NOEXO) and with exoskeleton: minimal impedance mode (MINIMP), L/H support ratio in line with a typical L/H net moment ratio (R0.8), lower (R0.5) and higher (R2.0) L/H support ratio than R0.8, and a mechanically fixed lumbar joint (LF; simulating hip joint-only exoskeleton designs). EMG-driven musculoskeletal model results indicated that R0.8 and R0.5 yielded significant reductions in spinal loading (4-11%, p < .004) across techniques when compared to MINIMP, through reducing active moments (14-30%) while not affecting lumbar flexion and passive moments. R2.0 and LF significantly reduced spinal loading (8-17%, p < .001; 22-26%, p < .001, respectively), however significantly restricted lumbar flexion (3-18%, 24-27%, respectively) and the associated passive moments. An L/H support ratio in line with a typical L/H net moment ratio reduces spinal loading, while allowing normal lifting behavior. High L/H support ratios (e.g., in hip joint-only exoskeleton designs) yield reductions in spinal loading, however, restrict lifting behavior, typically perceived as hindrance.

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不同腰髋支撑比的主动外骨骼支撑对举重过程中脊柱肌肉骨骼负荷和腰椎运动学的影响。
虽然主动背部支撑外骨骼可以减少脊柱的机械负荷,但目前的设计只包括一对驱动的髋关节,结合骨盆和躯干附件之间的刚性结构,限制腰椎屈曲,从而限制预期的抬起行为。这项研究提出了一种新型的主动外骨骼,包括驱动腰椎和髋关节,以及基于实时主动下背部力矩估计的受试者特定外骨骼控制。我们评估了不同腰髋(L/H)支撑比的外骨骼支撑对脊柱负荷、腰椎运动学和背部肌肉肌电图(EMG)的影响。8名健康男性采用无外骨骼(NOEXO)和有外骨骼的三种技术:最小阻抗模式(MINIMP), L/H支撑比符合典型的L/H净力矩比(R0.8),低于(R0.5)和高于(R2.0) L/H支撑比R0.8,机械固定腰椎关节(LF;模拟髋关节的外骨骼设计)。肌电驱动的肌肉骨骼模型结果显示,R0.8和R0.5显著降低了脊柱负荷(4-11%,p
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
11 weeks
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