Biomechanics Research - Mechanics of Living Organisms, Movement, Locomotion, Prosthetic Limbs

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Anatomy and biomechanics of the back muscles in the lumbar spine with reference to biomechanical modeling.

Hansen L, de Zee M, Rasmussen J, Andersen TB, Wong C, Simonsen EB

Institute of Medical Anatomy, Biomech. and Motor Control, University of Copenhagen, Denmark. LHA@ami.dk

STUDY DESIGN: This article describes the development of a musculoskeletal model of the human lumbar spine with focus on back muscles. It includes data from literature in a structured form. OBJECTIVE: To review the anatomy and biomechanics of the back muscles related to the lumbar spine with relevance for biomechanical modeling. SUMMARY OF BACKGROUND DATA: To reduce complexity, muscle units have been incorporated in an abridged manner, reducing their actions more or less to a single force equivalent. In early models of the lumbar spine, this may have been a necessary step to reduce complexity and, thereby, calculation time. The muscles of the spine are well described in the literature, but mainly qualitatively. Most of the literature provides a description of the structures without precise data of fiber length, muscle length, cross-sectional areas, moment arms, forces, etc. The predicted output of musculoskeletal models is very much dependent on the input parameters. The information needed to improve models consists of better approximations of the attachments to the vertebrae, and more precise data. METHOD: Review of literature. RESULTS: The predicted output of musculoskeletal models is very much dependent on the input parameters. Moderate changes in the assumed muscle line-of-action (i.e., moment arm) could substantially alter the magnitudes of predicted muscle and spinal forces, while the choice of optimization formulation is less sensitive. CONCLUSIONS: Input parameters, moment arms, as well as physiologic cross-sectional areas have a profound effect on the predicted muscle forces. Therefore, it is important to choose the values for moment arm and physiologic cross-sectional area carefully because they are essential input parameters to biomechanical models.

Published 22 August 2006 in Spine, 31(17): 1888-99.
Full-text of this article is available online (may require subscription).

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Biomechanics and Motor Control of Human Movement

Biomechanics and Motor Control of Human Movement