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Hip joint contact force in the emu (Dromaius novaehollandiae) during normal level walking.


ABSTRACT: The emu is a large, (bipedal) flightless bird that potentially can be used to study various orthopaedic disorders in which load protection of the experimental limb is a limitation of quadrupedal models. An anatomy-based analysis of normal emu walking gait was undertaken to determine hip contact forces for comparison with human data. Kinematic and kinetic data captured for two laboratory-habituated emus were used to drive the model. Muscle attachment data were obtained by dissection, and bony geometries were obtained by CT scan. Inverse dynamics calculations at all major lower-limb joints were used in conjunction with optimization of muscle forces to determine hip contact forces. Like human walking gait, emu ground reaction forces showed a bimodal distribution over the course of the stance phase. Two-bird averaged maximum hip contact force was approximately 5.5 times body weight, directed nominally axially along the femur. This value is only modestly larger than optimization-based hip contact forces reported in literature for humans. The interspecies similarity in hip contact forces makes the emu a biomechanically attractive animal in which to model loading-dependent human orthopaedic hip disorders.

SUBMITTER: Goetz JE 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC2291359 | biostudies-literature | 2008

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Hip joint contact force in the emu (Dromaius novaehollandiae) during normal level walking.

Goetz Jessica E JE   Derrick Timothy R TR   Pedersen Douglas R DR   Robinson Duane A DA   Conzemius Michael G MG   Baer Thomas E TE   Brown Thomas D TD  

Journal of biomechanics 20080118 4


The emu is a large, (bipedal) flightless bird that potentially can be used to study various orthopaedic disorders in which load protection of the experimental limb is a limitation of quadrupedal models. An anatomy-based analysis of normal emu walking gait was undertaken to determine hip contact forces for comparison with human data. Kinematic and kinetic data captured for two laboratory-habituated emus were used to drive the model. Muscle attachment data were obtained by dissection, and bony geo  ...[more]

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