In vitro modeling of human tibial strains during exercise in micro-gravity

Prolonged exposure to micro-gravity causes substantial bone loss (Leblanc et al., Journal of Bone Mineral Research 11 (1996) S323) and treadmill exercise under gravity replacement loads (GRLs) has been advocated as a countermeasure. To date, the magnitudes of GRLs employed for locomotion in space ha...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of biomechanics 2001-05, Vol.34 (5), p.693-698
Hauptverfasser: Peterman, Marc M., Hamel, Andrew J., Cavanagh, Peter R., Piazza, Stephen J., Sharkey, Neil A.
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container_end_page 698
container_issue 5
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container_title Journal of biomechanics
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creator Peterman, Marc M.
Hamel, Andrew J.
Cavanagh, Peter R.
Piazza, Stephen J.
Sharkey, Neil A.
description Prolonged exposure to micro-gravity causes substantial bone loss (Leblanc et al., Journal of Bone Mineral Research 11 (1996) S323) and treadmill exercise under gravity replacement loads (GRLs) has been advocated as a countermeasure. To date, the magnitudes of GRLs employed for locomotion in space have been substantially less than the loads imposed in the earthbound 1G environment, which may account for the poor performance of locomotion as an intervention. The success of future treadmill interventions will likely require GRLs of greater magnitude. It is widely held that mechanical tissue strain is an important intermediary signal in the transduction pathway linking the external loading environment to bone maintenance and functional adaptation; yet, to our knowledge, no data exist linking alterations in external skeletal loading to alterations in bone strain. In this preliminary study, we used unique cadaver simulations of micro-gravity locomotion to determine relationships between localized tibial bone strains and external loading as a means to better predict the efficacy of future exercise interventions proposed for bone maintenance on orbit. Bone strain magnitudes in the distal tibia were found to be linearly related to ground reaction force magnitude ( R 2>0.7). Strain distributions indicated that the primary mode of tibial loading was in bending, with little variation in the neutral axis over the stance phase of gait. The greatest strains, as well as the greatest strain sensitivity to altered external loading, occurred within the anterior crest and posterior aspect of the tibia, the sites furthest removed from the neutral axis of bending. We established a technique for estimating local strain magnitudes from external loads, and equations for predicting strain during simulated micro-gravity walking are presented.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/S0021-9290(01)00004-5
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source MEDLINE; ScienceDirect Journals (5 years ago - present); NASA Technical Reports Server
subjects Aerospace Medicine
Aged
Biomechanical Phenomena
Bone loss in space flight
Bone strain
Exercise - physiology
Exercise countermeasures
Gait - physiology
Human tibia
Humans
In Vitro Techniques
Micro-gravity
Middle Aged
Models, Biological
Space life sciences
Tibia - physiology
Walking - physiology
Weightlessness Countermeasures
Weightlessness Simulation
title In vitro modeling of human tibial strains during exercise in micro-gravity
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