Journal of Biomechanics
Volume 45, Issue 4 , Pages 699-705, 23 February 2012

The minimum required muscle force for a sit-to-stand task

  • Shinsuke Yoshioka

      Affiliations

    • Faculty of Sport and Health Science, Ritsumeikan University, Nojihigashi 1-1-1, Kusatsu city, Shiga 525-8577, Japan
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +81 77 599 4135; fax: +81 77 561 3761.
  • ,
  • Akinori Nagano

      Affiliations

    • Department of Computational Science, Kobe University, Japan
  • ,
  • Dean C. Hay

      Affiliations

    • School of Physical and Health Education, Nipissing University, Ontario, Canada
  • ,
  • Senshi Fukashiro

      Affiliations

    • Department of Life Sciences (Sports Sciences), The University of Tokyo, Japan

Accepted 27 November 2011. published online 11 January 2012.

Abstract 

The purpose of this study was to reveal the minimum required muscle force for a sit-to-stand task. Combining experimental procedures and computational processing, movements of various sit-to-stand patterns were obtained. Muscle forces and activations during a movement were calculated with an inverse dynamics method and a static numerical optimization method. The required muscle force for each movement was calculated with peak muscle activation, muscle physiological cross sectional area and specific tension. The robustness of the results was quantitatively evaluated with sensitivity analyses. From the results, a distinct threshold was found for the total required muscle force of the hip and knee extensors. Specifically, two findings were revealed: (1) the total force of hip and knee extensors is appropriate as the index of minimum required muscle force for a sit-to-stand task and (2) the minimum required total force is within the range of 35.3–49.2N/kg. A muscle is not mechanically independent from other muscles, since each muscle has some synergetic or antagonistic muscles. This means that the mechanical threshold of one muscle varies with the force exertion abilities of other muscles and cannot be evaluated independently. At the same time, some kinds of mechanical threshold necessarily exist in the sit-to-stand task, since a muscle force is an only force to drive the body and people cannot stand up from a chair without muscles. These indicate that the existence of the distinct threshold in the result of the total required muscle force is reasonable.

Keywords: Sit-to-stand movement, Mechanical threshold, Total muscle force, Muscle redundancy, Optimization

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PII: S0021-9290(11)00748-2

doi:10.1016/j.jbiomech.2011.11.054

Journal of Biomechanics
Volume 45, Issue 4 , Pages 699-705, 23 February 2012