The aim of the study was to investigate femoral neck strain during maximal isometric contraction of the hip-spanning muscles. The musculoskeletal and the femur finite-element models from an elderly white woman were taken from earlier studies. The hip-spanning muscles were grouped by function in six hip-spanning muscle groups. The peak hip and knee moments in the model were matched to corresponding published measurements of the hip and knee moments during maximal isometric exercises about the hip and the knee in elderly participants. The femoral neck strain was calculated using full activation of the agonist muscles at fourteen physiological joint angles. The 5%±0.8% of the femoral neck volume exceeded the 90th percentile of the strain distribution across the 84 studied scenarios. Hip extensors, flexors, and abductors generated the highest tension in the proximal neck (2727 με), tension (986 με) and compression (−2818 με) in the anterior and posterior neck, and compression (−2069 με) in the distal neck, respectively. Hip extensors and flexors generated the highest neck strain per unit of joint moment (63–67 με·m·N−1) at extreme hip angles. Therefore, femoral neck strain is heterogeneous and muscle contraction and posture dependent.
Australian Research CouncilDE1401015301. Introduction
Muscle forces are associated with net bone formation [1]. Exercise is thus recommended to mitigate bone loss and the associated risk for fragility fractures, arising from either the natural aging process or prolonged disuse. However, randomized controlled trials of exercise interventions have shown a variable hip response to exercise, yet leaving unresolved the exercise type for optimal osteogenic response in the femoral neck [2]. Information about the muscle-specific mechanical stimulus in the proximal femur may help explain the variable bone response to exercise in the femoral neck and ultimately it may help in designing targeted exercise interventions for promoting hip strength [3].
Areal Bone Mineral Density (aBMD) measurements showed a variable bone response in the proximal femur to diverse exercise interventions [4, 5]. For example, Kohrt and coworkers [4] showed that weight-bearing exercises, for example, jogging, cause a 3.5% aBMD increase in the femoral neck and a 6.1% aBMD increase in Ward’s triangle while resistance exercises, for example, weight-lifting and rowing, cause a 5.1% aBMD increase in the Ward’s triangle but no aBMD changes in the femoral neck. Lohman and coworkers [5] used a complex exercise program including weight-bearing and resistance exercise showing a 2.0% aBMD increase in the trochanteric region but no aBMD changes in the femoral neck and Ward’s triangle. Yet the mechanism underpinning the variable and at times contrasted hip bone response to exercise is not fully understood, complicating the design of exercise interventions for optimal osteogenic response in the femoral neck [2]. Emerging evidence suggests that exercise type dependent muscle contractions could be responsible for a variable mechanical stimulus in the femoral neck. For example, Lang and coworkers [3] showed that squat/deadlift and abduction/adduction exercise programs cause an exercise-specific and spatially heterogeneous volumetric Bone Mineral Density (vBMD) change, which was then attributed to the different muscles contraction driving squat/deadlift and abduction/adduction exercises [3].
The femoral neck mechanics depends on muscle force intensity, orientation, and application point, which in turn are defined by muscle activation, architecture, and body posture. For example, the hamstring muscles generate a hip force vector aligned with the direction through the ischial tuberosity and the posterior aspect of the tibial plateau whereas the gluteus medius force pulls the femur from the greater trochanter toward the iliac crest. The former muscles generate a force vector in a quasi-sagittal plane and mainly aligned with the femoral shaft while the latter muscles generate a force vector in a quasi-frontal plane aligned with the femoral neck axis. Body posture influences muscle length, function, and the musculoskeletal alignment, thus modulating the muscle mechanical effect on the surrounding skeleton. Earlier numerical studies of femoral neck strain accounted for the combined effect of the different muscles during activity, showing that femoral strain is exercise type dependent [6–8]. However, no study has investigated the separate effect of isolated muscle contractions on the femoral neck strain. This information may help understand how muscles separately contribute to femoral neck mechanics, fracture behaviour, and response to exercise.
The aim of this study was to test the hypothesis that the hip-spanning muscles can generate a muscle- and posture-specific strain distribution in the proximal femur. To this purpose, femoral neck strain patterns during maximal isometric contractions of the hip-spanning muscles were calculated over a physiological range of motion for an average Caucasian elderly woman. Principal tensile and compressive strain maps were compared in terms of magnitude and regional distribution, which are known to determine both amount and spatial location of bone mechanoadaptation [1].
2. Materials and Methods
Femoral neck strains were calculated using (a) validated musculoskeletal and finite-element models of an average-sized Caucasian woman and (b) hip and knee moment measured during maximal isometric exercises from two cohorts of elderly healthy participants [9, 10]. Contractions of the hip-spanning muscles across a physiological range of hip and knee angles were simulated. The muscle contribution to the hip force vector, femoral neck strain intensity, and spatial distribution were calculated for a range of hip and knee angles within a physiological range likely achievable by healthy adult individuals.
The lower-limb musculoskeletal model and the finite-element model of the right femur were taken from earlier studies [11, 12]. In summary, models were based on an 81-year-old Caucasian woman, 167 cm height and 63 kg mass with no history of musculoskeletal disease. The musculoskeletal model was a 13-segment, 15-degree-of-freedom articulated system, actuated by 84 Hill-type muscle-tendon units. The model of each muscle was identified using the muscles’ physiological cross section area (PCSA) extracted from clinical images and a nominal peak muscle tension of 1 MPa. The tendon slack length, optimal fibre length, and pennation angles were adjusted from the work of Delp and coworkers [13]. The hip and knee reference pose was defined by assuming zero hip and knee angles with the donor lying supine. Positive rotation of hip and knee angles was assumed hip abduction, flexion, and knee flexion. The femur was modelled using a locally isotropic ten-node tetrahedron mesh whose geometry and material property distribution were extracted from computer-tomography images. The femur model was previously validated against measurements of cortical strains (R2=0.95; RMSE = 12.5%; maximum error = 35.1%; [6]), while the musculoskeletal model was shown to yield joint angles, moments, hip, and muscle force patterns in agreement with published patterns for a variety of daily activity types [11].
The hip and knee moment generating capacity in the model was matched to that in the elderly population. The peak isometric moment about the hip and the knee measured in two cohorts of healthy controls was taken from the work of Steinhilber et al. [10] and Tan et al. [9] (Table 1). One cohort (five males and eleven females aged 54 to 73) executed maximal isometric exercises about the hip [10] while the second cohort (thirty females of 50.6±9.7 year of age) executed maximal exercises about the knee [9]. The muscles in the model were grouped by function (Table 2). The peak isometric moment measured for each exercise (Table 1) was associated with the corresponding agonist muscle group (Table 2), assuming no antagonist muscle contraction. The muscle contraction velocity was set to zero (isometric) and the muscle activation was set to 1 (maximal effort). For each exercise and muscle group j, the peak isometric moment Mm∝j in the model was calculated using the equation(1)Mm∝j=∑if∝ij×l∝ij,where ∝ is the joint angle; f∝ij is the peak isometric muscle force of the muscle i; and l∝ij is the corresponding muscle lever arm. The peak isometric muscle force f∝ji was then scaled using the equation(2)f∝ji=Me∝jMm∝j×f∝ji,where Me∝j is the average moment measured in the elderly population. For the maximal knee extension and flexion exercises, the knee angle (∝) was set to 60° and 30° according to the work of Tan et al. [9] (Table 1) while for the maximal exercises about the hip the joint angle ∝ was set to the hip angle at the peak isometric moment in the model. The hip and knee moment and the corresponding muscle forces in the model are reported in the Supplementary Figures 1 and 2 (see Supplementary Material available online at https://doi.org/10.1155/2017/2873789).
Joint moments (average ± standard deviation) and the corresponding joint angle during maximal isometric contractions of the hip and knee spanning muscles in healthy controls.
Task
Joint angle (°)
Joint moment (Nm ± SD)
Hip abduction
N/A
110.30 ± 24.90§
Hip adduction
N/A
85.4 ± 23.8§
Hip flexion
N/A
81.6 ± 17.5§
Hip extension
N/A
105.1 ± 44.3§
Knee extension
60° knee flexion30° knee flexion
129.10 ± 40.69°
Knee flexion
70.90 ± 14.20°
§Steinhilber et al., 2011 (five healthy males and eleven females aged 54 to 73).
The simulation of isometric contraction of the isolated hip adductor muscles at 0° hip adduction (left) and the linked finite-element model of the femur (right). The femoral young modulus map, muscle, and joint forces are also displayed.
The musculoskeletal anthropometry, the femoral geometry, and mineral content in the model were compared to corresponding values in elderly Caucasian women. The model height and weight were compared to corresponding values from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (US Department of Health and Human Services, https://www.cdc.gov/). Muscle moment arms were compared to corresponding published values obtained using different procedures [15–18]. The femoral neck diameter, femoral neck length, anteversion angle, and craniocaudal angle were compared with the literature [19–21]. The aBMD in the femur was extracted from the CT data following the guidelines by Khoo et al. [22] and compared to corresponding values in a cohort of elderly Caucasian women [23].
The hip force vector was expressed in the femoral coordinate system and compared with measurements taken from implanted patients during walking, stair ascent, and stair descent by Bergmann et al. [24].
The calculated strain maps were compared to provide a relative information about the potential of the different muscle groups for generating localised tensile and compressive strain over the femoral neck. The heterogeneity of the strain map was assessed by calculating the neck volume and cortex area exceeding the 75th and 90th percentile of the strain distribution. The relative capacity of each muscle group to load the femoral neck was assessed by comparing the peak and the average tensile and compressive strain over the studied joint angles.
The effect of different hip and knee joint angles on femoral neck strain was assessed by calculating the range of the peak tensile and compressive strain generated by each muscle group across the studied joint angles and by normalizing the calculated peak strain by the corresponding joint moment. The peak strain range provides information about the combined effect of the different geometrical musculoskeletal arrangement and muscle force generating capacity induced by changes of body posture. The normalized peak strain provided the distinct effect of the different geometrical musculoskeletal arrangement on neck strain and it represents the specific neck strain generating capacity per unit joint moment.
3. Results
The model represented an average elderly Caucasian woman. The height and weight of the model (167 cm height; 63 kg weight) compared well with the average Caucasian woman 60 years of age and over (173.8 cm height; 71.9 kg weight; [25]). The femoral length, head diameter, femoral neck length, and the craniocaudal angle were within one standard deviation (Z-score < 1) from corresponding average values in the same population while the Z-score for the femoral anteversion angle was 1.1 [19–21] (Supplementary Table 1). The aBMD was 0.53 g·cm−2 (T-score = −2.5), which represents the 30th percentile of elderly Caucasian women [23]. The range of muscle moment arms over the studied joint angles compared well with earlier MRI studies [16, 26], an in vivo noninvasive protocol [17], and dissection studies [18, 27] (Table 3).
Moment arm range (minimum–maximum) across a physiological range of motion for each of the studied muscle bundles in the model and corresponding published values.
Muscle bundles
Model
Scheys et al., 2008
Arnold et al., 2000
Bonnefoy et al., 2007
Németh and Ohlsén, 1985
Németh and Ohlsén, 1989
Hip abduction
Gluteus medius anterior
4.7–5.7
1.0–4.0
5.4±0.3∗
Gluteus medius medial
5.1–5.7
1.8–4.5
Gluteus medius posterior
4.1–4.9
0.7–4.8
Gluteus minimus anterior
4.1–4.7
0.2–3.8
4.2±0.2∗
Gluteus minimus medial
4.2–5.3
1.0–4.0
Gluteus minimus posterior
4.3–5.7
0–4.2
Tensor fascia latae
4.7–6.8
2.0–6.5
4.6±0.4∗
Hip adduction
Adductor brevis
5.4–7.5
1.0–6.0
Adductor longus
5.3–7.0
2.2–7.7
Adductor magnus superior
6.5–8.2
3.0–6.0
2.4–6.0
7.2±0.3∗
Adductor magnus medial
6.7–7.7
3.0–6.0
Adductor magnus inferior
3.2–6.2
2.2–6.1
Gracilis
8.4–9.4
1.0–7.8
Hip flexion
Ileopsoas
3.5–4.1
1.8–4.1
Rectus femoris
2.1–4.2
1.9–5.0
Sartorius
2.0–7.3
1.8–7.0
Hip extension
Biceps femoris long head
2.5–6.0
0.2–6.0
Gluteus maximus anterior
4.6–5.3
N/A–4.0
3.1–7.5
Gluteus maximus medial
5.3–6.9
N/A–4.5
Gluteus maximus posterior
4.8–9.0
N/A–6.2
Semimembranosus
1.4–5.4
N/A–5.9
3.1–4.1
Semitendinosus
2.2–6.3
N/A–6.0
3.3–5.2
Knee flexion
Biceps femoris long head
4.1–5.5
2.1–7.1
4.0–7.0
Biceps femoris short head
3.0–4.2
Semimembranosus
2.9–4.1
3.1–4.1
2.2–5.5
Semitendinosus
2.7–4.4
3.3–5.2
Knee extension
Rectus femoris
2.5–5.2
2.1–5.1
Vastus intermedius
2.6–5.3
Vastus lateralis
2.5–5.0
Vastus medialis
2.4–4.9
∗Average ± standard deviation.
The calculated hip contact force ranged from 223 N to 2171 N during isometric contraction of the knee extensor and hip abductor muscles, respectively (Supplementary Figure 3). The hip abductor and adductor muscles generated a hip force that mainly lay in the frontal plane; the former was oriented from 27° to −4° while the latter was oriented from 34° to 27° as the hip adduction angle changed between 0° and −39° hip adduction. The hip extensor and flexor muscles generated a hip force that mainly lay in the sagittal plane; the former oriented from −11° to −17° while the latter was constantly oriented at 53° as the hip flexion angle changed between 30° and −20° hip flexion. Knee flexor and extensor muscles similarly generated a hip force vector within 8° from the femoral shaft axis and changed as little as 4° as the knee flexion angle changed between 0° and 90°. The orientation of the hip force vector measured by Bergmann et al. [24] over different motor tasks and subjects was within and narrower than the calculated range of the hip force vector orientation (Figure 2).
The calculated hip force vector generated by peak isometric contraction of the hip-spanning muscles. The femoral coordinate system is displayed in the posterior and medial views. The hip contact force measured by Bergmann et al. (2001) on three patients (i.e., SNK, KWR, and PFL) during a variety of daily activity is displayed as black dots. Reference zero and positive angle rotations in the frontal (α), sagittal (β), and transversal (γ) planes are also displayed.
The proximal neck was always mainly in tension while the distal neck was always mainly in compression. The femoral neck volume exceeding the 90th percentile of the tensile and compressive strain distribution across the studied muscle contractions and joint angles were the 5%±0.8% of the total femoral neck volume. The peak tensile strain ranged between 2727 με and 276 με while the peak compressive strain ranged between −3907 με and −324 με. Hip extensor and knee extensor contraction generated the highest strain values (Figure 3). The tensile strain map was variable showing a muscle- and posture-dependent distribution (Figure 4) while the compressive strain map was found less variable and less dependent on exercise type and postural changes.
The peak tensile and compressive strain generated by isometric contractions of the hip-spanning muscles across the investigated physiological joint angles.
The tensile strain distribution in the femoral neck for selected loading conditions. Posterior, proximal, and anterior views are displayed. The blue and red regions represent the neck cortex region subjected to tensile strain levels above the 75th and 95th percentile of the tensile strain distribution.
In average terms, hip extensors contraction induced the highest tensile strain over the studied hip flexion angles, reaching the highest tensile strain (1433 με) in the proximal-medial neck and the highest compressive strain (−1671 με) in the anterior-medial neck. Hip flexor muscle contraction induced the highest tensile strain (986 με), averaged across the studied hip flexion angles, in the anterior-lateral neck and the highest compressive strain (−2818 με) in the posterior-lateral neck. Hip abductor muscles induced the highest compressive strain in the distal-lateral neck (−2069 με) (Figure 5).
The monitored eight locations (a) of the femoral neck cortex: proximal-lateral (PL), proximal-medial (PM), posterior-lateral (RL), posterior-medial (PM), distal-lateral (DL), distal-medial (DM), anterior-lateral (AL), and anterior-medial (AM). The boxplot (b) represents the average tensile (red) and compressive (blue) strain at the monitored locations during contractions of the hip-spanning muscles (1–6). The error bar represents ± standard deviation.
Variations of hip and knee angle induced a variable effect on femoral neck strain across the different muscle group and joint angles. The peak tensile strain in the femoral neck cortex changed by 974 με (36% of the peak tensile strain) during hip extensor contraction as the hip flexion angle varied from 30° to −20° while the peak compressive strain changed by 1386 με (41% of the peak compressive strain) during the hip abductor contraction as the hip adduction angle varied from 0° to −39°. Little changes of the femoral neck strain were observed during knee extension and flexion exercises (Figure 3). The normalized tensile and compressive strain were variable across the different exercises. The hip extensor and flexor muscles generated the highest normalized strain averaged over the studied hip flexion angles (30 με·m·N−1 in tension and 52 με·m·N−1 in compression) and increased at extreme hip flexion angles reaching 42 με·m·N−1 in tension and 67 με·m·N−1 in compression. The hip abductor muscles induced a normalized tensile strain of 22 με·m·N−1 at 0° hip adduction increasing up to 34 με·m·N−1 at −39° hip adduction (Figure 6) and a moderately variable peak compressive strain (32±1.2με·m·N−1). The hip adductors, knee extensors, and flexors showed a normalized strain lower than 24 με·m·N−1 and little variation due to postural changes (normalized strain range: <6 με·m·N−1).
The normalized peak tensile strain across the studied hip-spanning muscles and joint angles.
4. Discussion
The aim of the study was to assess femoral neck strains in response to maximal isometric contractions of isolated hip-spanning muscles across a physiological range of hip and knee joint angles. The model anatomy and femoral elasticity represented an average-sized osteoporotic Caucasian woman. Simulations mimicked maximal isometric contractions of the principal hip-spanning muscle groups across a physiological range of hip and knee angles in the elderly population. Femoral neck strain was highly localised for each studied scenario while the strain level and location were muscle- and posture-specific.
The calculated 84 femoral strain distributions were highly localised for each investigated scenario: 5%±0.8% of the femoral neck volume was subjected to a strain level higher than the 90th percentile of the strain distribution while the peak strain value and location were muscle- and posture-dependant (Figures 4 and 5). In fact, the hip extensor and knee flexor muscles, which have the same thigh muscles in common (Table 2), induced the highest tensile strain in the proximal-posterior neck cortex (1433 με) and compressive strain in the anterior neck (−1671 με), the hip abductor muscles induced the highest compressive strain in the distal neck (−3353 με), and the hip flexor muscles induced the highest compressive strain in the proximal-posterior (−2718 με) neck cortex and tensile strain in the anterior neck (1089 με). The knee extensor muscles had the lowest potential to load the femoral neck due to the relatively low hip reaction force generated by the rectus femoris (Supplementary Figure 3), which is the only hip-spanning muscle within knee extensor muscle group. The effect of body posture, which can influence the femoral neck strain by altering either the muscle force generating capacity or the geometrical musculoskeletal arrangement (Figure 2), was exercise-specific. In fact, the compressive strain varied during hip abduction contraction in terms of both peak (41% variation of the peak compressive strain) and location (Figure 4) as the hip adduction angle changed while moderate changes of both the peak and location of the peak strain were observed during knee flexion and extension exercises (Figure 3). This observed exercise-specific femoral neck strain was attributable to a combination of muscle architecture, body posture, and muscle force generating properties. The muscle architecture induced a muscle-specific potential for generating femoral neck strain per unit of joint moment and the effect of postural changes was much higher for hip extensors, flexors, and abductors than that observed for the hip adductors, knee flexors, and extensors (Figure 6). As such, for these latter muscles the variable capacity of generating femoral neck strain at different joint angles was mainly attributable to changes of the muscle force generating capacity at different joint angles.
The present study provides a theoretical foundation for explaining the variable mechanoresponse to exercise observed in the femoral neck and for supporting the design of novel exercise intervention for bone health. The model previously demonstrated a valid tool for studying femoral strains during activity in that it was validated against experimental measurements of cortical strain (R2=0.95; [6]) and it provided realistic hip contact force patterns during activity [6, 11]. The general finding of a localised muscle- and posture-specific femoral neck mechanics is in agreement with the heterogeneous and exercise-depended bone response following squat/deadlift and abduction/adduction exercises observed by Lang and coworkers [3]. In the same study, Lang and coworkers [3] also observed a concomitant increase of both the femoral neck bone and the hip extensor muscle strength during squat/deadlift exercise, which is in agreement with the high potential of the hip extensor muscles for loading the neck cortex found in the present study. Another finding of the present study resides in the different normalized strain generated by the different muscle groups (Figure 6). This finding provides a meaning for ranking the effect of the hip-spanning muscles on the femoral neck mechanics independently by the variable muscle strength across individuals [9, 10]. Moreover, the observed tendency for higher femoral neck strains toward extreme hip angles (Figure 6) is in agreement with the notion that bone structure is optimized to sustain habitual loads [28] and it suggests that exercising using nonhabitual and extreme body postures may prove beneficial for femoral neck health, although the decreased muscle force generating capacity toward extreme joint angles expectedly limits the potential benefit of exercising at extreme body postures.
This study has some limitations. Firstly, no interaction between joint angles was considered while more complex body postures could have further widened the range of neck strain maps reported in the present study. This may only have strengthened the conclusion of muscle type- and posture-dependent strains in the femoral neck. Secondly, the joint moment measured during maximal exercises may have been generated by activity of both agonist and antagonist muscles, possibly leading to an underestimation of the calculated force of the agonist muscles. Nevertheless, the up to 20% activity of antagonist muscles that can be expected while executing maximal exercises [29] is smaller than the average 28% variation in the measured joint moments [10]. Hence, the agonist muscle forces used in the present study are representative of maximal exercises in healthy elderly individuals. Thirdly, present results were obtained for a single individual representing an average-sized elderly Caucasian woman, while variations in musculoskeletal geometry and bone quality are known to affect femoral neck strain [30]. Nevertheless, the present study provides a first understanding of the mechanical effect in the femoral neck of the hip-spanning muscles in a single representative individual. Further studies are necessary to expose the variation of femoral neck strain within the population of interest. Fourthly, the orientation of the hip force vector calculated during isolated contraction of the hip-spanning muscle groups was larger than that measured during normal activity (Figure 2). However, this apparent discrepancy should be expected because during normal activity the hip force vector is a weighted function of the force vectors generated by the typically complex set of muscles concurrently active. Fifthly, the non-hip-spanning muscles were not included in the model while they directly contribute to the hip force and femoral strain during dynamic activities by means of the dynamic coupling of the musculoskeletal system [31]. However, present results are relevant in that the hip-spanning muscles generate the majority of the hip contact force [31] and femoral neck strain [6] also during normal dynamic activity. Lastly, the present study focused on the femoral neck cortex while the intracortical trabecular network and other anatomical regions such as the femoral trochanter are important to femoral strength and exercise. More research is necessary to extend the present analysis to different anatomical regions.
Despite the above limitations, the present analysis provides the first quantification of the potential of the hip-spanning muscles for loading the femoral neck cortex in a single elderly Caucasian woman. This information can provide a theoretical foundation for understanding the variable, exercise-specific, and heterogeneous femoral neck response to exercise [3], drive the development of novel exercise interventions to promote femoral neck health [32], and provide insights into understanding the mechanism by which the combination of intense muscle contractions and low bone quality may trigger spontaneous neck fractures [33].
Conflicts of Interest
The author declares that he has no conflicts of interest.
Acknowledgments
This study was supported by the Australian Research Council (DE140101530).
FrostH. M.The mechanostat: a proposed pathogenic mechanism of osteoporoses and the bone mass effects of mechanical and nonmechanical agents19872273852-s2.0-0023173665Guadalupe-GrauA.FuentesT.GuerraB.CalbetJ. A. L.Exercise and bone mass in adults200939643946810.2165/00007256-200939060-000022-s2.0-66249084871LangT. F.SaeedI. H.StreeperT.Carballido-GamioJ.HarnishR. J.FrassettoL. A.LeeS. M. C.SibongaJ. D.KeyakJ. H.SpieringB. A.GrodsinskyC. M.BloombergJ. J.CavanaghP. R.Spatial heterogeneity in the response of the proximal femur to two lower-body resistance exercise regimens20142961337134510.1002/jbmr.21552-s2.0-84901284615KohrtW. M.EhsaniA. A.BirgeS. J.Jr.Effects of exercise involving predominantly either joint-reaction or ground-reaction forces on bone mineral density in older women19971281253126110.1359/jbmr.1997.12.8.12532-s2.0-0030806249LohmanT.GoingS.HallM.RitenbaughC.BareL.HillA.HoutkooperL.AickinM.BoydenT.PamenterR.Effects of resistance training on regional and total bone mineral density in premenopausal women: a randomized prospective study19951071015102410.1002/jbmr.56501007052-s2.0-0029038410MartelliS.KershM. E.SchacheA. G.PandyM. G.Strain energy in the femoral neck during exercise20144781784179110.1016/j.jbiomech.2014.03.0362-s2.0-84900564421EdwardsW. B.MillerR. H.DerrickT. R.Femoral strain during walking predicted with muscle forces from static and dynamic optimization20164971206121310.1016/j.jbiomech.2016.03.007MartelliS.Femoral neck strain during maximal contraction of isolated hip-spanning muscle groupsProceedings of the 22nd Congress of the European Society of Biomechanics (ESB '16)2016Lyon, Francehttps://esbiomech.org/conference/index.php/congress/lyon2016/paper/viewFile/490/568TanJ.BalciN.SepiciV.GenerF. A.Isokinetic and isometric strength in osteoarthrosis of the knee19957453643692-s2.0-0028793076SteinhilberB.HauptG.BoeerJ.GrauS.KraussI.Reproducibility of concentric isokinetic and isometric strength measurements at the hip in patients with hip osteoarthritis: a preliminary study2011191394610.3233/IES-2011-0395MartelliS.PivonkaP.EbelingP. R.Femoral shaft strains during daily activities: implications for atypical femoral fractures201429886987610.1016/j.clinbiomech.2014.08.0012-s2.0-84922730597MartelliS.TaddeiF.CappelloA.van sint JanS.LeardiniA.VicecontiM.Effect of sub-optimal neuromotor control on the hip joint load during level walking20114491716172110.1016/j.jbiomech.2011.03.0392-s2.0-79956136264DelpS. L.LoanJ. P.HoyM. G.ZajacF. E.ToppE. L.RosenJ. M.An interactive graphics-based model of the lower extremity to study orthopaedic surgical procedures199037875776710.1109/10.1027912-s2.0-0025470348SchileoE.BalistreriL.GrassiL.CristofoliniL.TaddeiF.To what extent can linear finite element models of human femora predict failure under stance and fall loading configurations?201447143531353810.1016/j.jbiomech.2014.08.0242-s2.0-84922599020ScheysL.Van CampenhoutA.SpaepenA.SuetensP.JonkersI.Personalized MR-based musculoskeletal models compared to rescaled generic models in the presence of increased femoral anteversion: effect on hip moment arm lengths200828335836510.1016/j.gaitpost.2008.05.0022-s2.0-54049099140ArnoldA. S.SalinasS.AsakawaD. J.DelpS. L.Accuracy of muscle moment arms estimated from MRI-based musculoskeletal models of the lower extremity20005210811910.1002/1097-0150(2000)5:2<108::aid-igs5>3.0.co;2-22-s2.0-0034086751BonnefoyA.DoriotN.SenkM.DohinB.PradonD.ChèzeL.A non-invasive protocol to determine the personalized moment arms of knee and ankle muscles20074081776178510.1016/j.jbiomech.2006.07.0282-s2.0-34248583670NémethG.OhlsénH.In vivo moment arm lengths for hip extensor muscles at different angles of hip flexion198518212914010.1016/0021-9290(85)90005-32-s2.0-0021918556NobleP. C.AlexanderJ. W.LindahlL. J.YewD. T.GranberryW. M.TullosH. S.The anatomic basis of femoral component design198823514816510.1097/00003086-198810000-00015MichelottiJ.ClarkJ. M.Femoral neck length and hip fracture risk199914101714172010.1359/jbmr.1999.14.10.17142-s2.0-0032859325JacksonT. J.LindnerD.El-BitarY. F.DombB. G.Effect of femoral anteversion on clinical outcomes after hip arthroscopy2015311354110.1016/j.arthro.2014.07.0092-s2.0-84929027579KhooB. C. C.BrownK.CannC.ZhuK.HenzellS.LowV.GustafssonS.PriceR. I.PrinceR. L.Comparison of QCT-derived and DXA-derived areal bone mineral density and T scores20092091539154510.1007/s00198-008-0820-y2-s2.0-68949209983McNabbB. L.VittinghoffE.SchwartzA. V.EastellR.BauerD. C.EnsrudK.RosenbergE.SantoraA.Barrett-ConnorE.BlackD. M.BMD changes and predictors of increased bone loss in postmenopausal women after a 5-year course of alendronate20132861319132710.1002/jbmr.18642-s2.0-84878217063BergmannG.DeuretzbacherG.HellerM.GraichenF.RohlmannA.StraussJ.DudaG. N.Hip contact forces and gait patterns from routine activities200134785987110.1016/S0021-9290(01)00040-92-s2.0-0034984126McDowellM.FryarC.OgdenC.FlegalK.Anthropometric reference data for children and adults United States, 2003–200620082003–2006https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nhsr/nhsr010.pdfScheysL.LoeckxD.SpaepenA.SuetensP.JonkersI.Atlas-based non-rigid image registration to automatically define line-of-action muscle models: a validation study200942556557210.1016/j.jbiomech.2008.12.0142-s2.0-61849152934NémethG.OhlsénH.3D-location of the L5–S1 fulcrum in relation to the hip198914660460510.1097/00007632-198906000-00011FrostH. M.Vital biomechanics: proposed general concepts for skeletal adaptations to mechanical usage198842314515610.1007/bf025563272-s2.0-0023837277KrishnanC.WilliamsG. N.Error associated with antagonist muscle activity in isometric knee strength testing2010109352753610.1007/s00421-010-1391-0TaddeiF.PalmadoriI.TaylorW. R.HellerM. O.BordiniB.ToniA.SchileoE.European Society of Biomechanics S.M. Perren Award 2014: safety factor of the proximal femur during gait: a population-based finite element study201447143433344010.1016/j.jbiomech.2014.08.0302-s2.0-84922746925CorreaT. A.CrossleyK. M.KimH. J.PandyM. G.Contributions of individual muscles to hip joint contact force in normal walking20104381618162210.1016/j.jbiomech.2010.02.0082-s2.0-77952583949MartelliS.MokhtarzadehH.PivonkaP.EbelingP. R.The femoral neck mechanoresponse to hip extensors exercise: a case study201720179521954110.1155/2017/5219541VicecontiM.TaddeiF.CristofoliniL.MartelliS.FalcinelliC.SchileoE.Are spontaneous fractures possible? An example of clinical application for personalised, multiscale neuro-musculo-skeletal modelling201245342142610.1016/j.jbiomech.2011.11.0482-s2.0-84856046192