volume 224 issue 18

Soft tissue deformations explain most of the mechanical work variations of human walking

Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2021-08-13
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR0.931
CiteScore5.3
Impact factor2.6
ISSN00220949, 14779145
PubMed ID:  34387332
Molecular Biology
Animal Science and Zoology
Physiology
Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Insect Science
Aquatic Science
Abstract
ABSTRACT

Humans perform mechanical work during walking, some by leg joints actuated by muscles, and some by passive, dissipative soft tissues. Dissipative losses must be restored by active muscle work, potentially in amounts sufficient to cost substantial metabolic energy. The most dissipative, and therefore costly, walking conditions might be predictable from the pendulum-like dynamics of the legs. If this behavior is systematic, it may also predict the work distribution between active joints and passive soft tissues. We therefore tested whether the overall negative work of walking, and the fraction owing to soft tissue dissipation, are both predictable by a simple dynamic walking model across a wide range of conditions. The model predicts whole-body negative work from the leading leg's impact with the ground (termed the collision), to increase with the squared product of walking speed and step length. We experimentally tested this in humans (N=9) walking in 26 different combinations of speed (0.7–2.0 m s−1) and step length (0.5–1.1 m), with recorded motions and ground reaction forces. Whole-body negative collision work increased as predicted (R2=0.73), with a consistent fraction of approximately 63% (R2=0.88) owing to soft tissues. Soft tissue dissipation consistently accounted for approximately 56% of the variation in total whole-body negative work, across a wide range of speed and step length combinations. During typical walking, active work to restore dissipative losses could account for 31% of the net metabolic cost. Soft tissue dissipation, not included in most biomechanical studies, explains most of the variation in negative work of walking, and could account for a substantial fraction of the metabolic cost.

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van der Zee T. J., Kuo A. D. Soft tissue deformations explain most of the mechanical work variations of human walking // Journal of Experimental Biology. 2021. Vol. 224. No. 18.
GOST all authors (up to 50) Copy
van der Zee T. J., Kuo A. D. Soft tissue deformations explain most of the mechanical work variations of human walking // Journal of Experimental Biology. 2021. Vol. 224. No. 18.
RIS |
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RIS Copy
TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1242/jeb.239889
UR - https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.239889
TI - Soft tissue deformations explain most of the mechanical work variations of human walking
T2 - Journal of Experimental Biology
AU - van der Zee, Tim J.
AU - Kuo, Arthur D.
PY - 2021
DA - 2021/08/13
PB - The Company of Biologists
IS - 18
VL - 224
PMID - 34387332
SN - 0022-0949
SN - 1477-9145
ER -
BibTex
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BibTex (up to 50 authors) Copy
@article{2021_van der Zee,
author = {Tim J. van der Zee and Arthur D. Kuo},
title = {Soft tissue deformations explain most of the mechanical work variations of human walking},
journal = {Journal of Experimental Biology},
year = {2021},
volume = {224},
publisher = {The Company of Biologists},
month = {aug},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1242/jeb.239889},
number = {18},
doi = {10.1242/jeb.239889}
}