Development of a multibody model of the lower limbs to evaluate the effect of ankle-foot orthoses on human gait

Biomechanics is the scientific domain which deals with the study of biological systems, such as the human body, using physical concepts and mechanical engineering methodologies. It allows for the development of new medical devices and provides a quantitative analysis of the subject being studied. In...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ferreira, Philippe (author)
Other Authors: Flores, F. G. (author), Siebler, M. (author), Flores, Paulo (author), Kecskeméthy, A. (author)
Format: conferencePaper
Language:eng
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1822/24589
Country:Portugal
Oai:oai:repositorium.sdum.uminho.pt:1822/24589
Description
Summary:Biomechanics is the scientific domain which deals with the study of biological systems, such as the human body, using physical concepts and mechanical engineering methodologies. It allows for the development of new medical devices and provides a quantitative analysis of the subject being studied. In the present work, the effect of an ankle-foot orthosis (AFO) was studied on a healthy male subject. For this purpose, a biomechanical multibody 2D-model was developed in object-oriented multibody simulation library MOBILE. The model was made of 9 rigid bodies constrained by 9 frictionless hinged joints. Three additional degrees of freedom (DOFs) were attached to the hip so the model can move freely in the plane. Kinematic data acquired in a gait lab, with and without orthoses, was used as time functions to drive the joints. Moreover, a foot contact model was designed based on three Hunt-Crossley’s sphere-plane contacts. The measured ankle kinematics was successfully reproduced using forward dynamics principles for the stance phase period. In a first approach, barefoot kinematics was reproduced to define the foot properties by adjusting manually the foot parameters and fitting the ankle angle. The ankle moment obtained in the gait lab was used to power the ankle joint. Then, the AFO was added as a linear torsional spring element acting at the ankle joint and the moment powering the ankle joint obtained in the free case was scaled down by a manual optimization until the simulated ankle angle fitted the measured one with orthoses. It was found that the AFO scales down the muscle moment developed at the ankle by 15% when an AFO with equivalent torsional spring stiffness of k=50Nm/rad is used.