A method for the intravital measurement of interspinous kinematics
Autor: | Malcolm H. Pope, Tommy Hansson, Allison M. Kaigle, Braden C. Fleming |
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Rok vydání: | 1992 |
Předmět: |
External Fixators
Rotation Movement Transducers Biomedical Engineering Biophysics Kinematics Bone Nails Translation (geometry) Models Biological Displacement (vector) Optics medicine Humans Orthopedics and Sports Medicine Physics Lumbar Vertebrae business.industry Electrodiagnosis Rehabilitation Biomechanics Body movement Equipment Design Stainless Steel Sagittal plane Vibration medicine.anatomical_structure Calibration business Biomedical engineering |
Zdroj: | Journal of Biomechanics. 25:451-456 |
ISSN: | 0021-9290 |
DOI: | 10.1016/0021-9290(92)90264-2 |
Popis: | A novel non-radiographic technique for objectively quantifying quasi-static or dynamic intervertebral motion of a spinal motion segment in vivo in human subjects is presented here. The intervertebral motion device (IMD) is an instrumented linkage transducer system which can continuously measure over time two-dimensional sagittal plane rigid-body motion. Three custom-built omega-shaped displacement transducers are utilized. The IMD is rigidly fixed to the spinous processes of the lumbar motion segment by means of two intraosseous pins. Knowing the mechanoelectrical behavior and geometric configuration of the IMD, the relative spatial motion between the vertebral bodies can be resolved into sagittal rotation, axial translation, and anterior-posterior shear translation. Static calibrations of the IMD in the ranges of +/- 4 degrees rotation and +/- 4 mm translation determined the absolute maximum errors to be 0.2 degree and 0.07 mm for rotation and translation measurements, respectively, with corresponding variances of 0.1 degrees and 0.03 mm. For use in the vibration environment, negligible motion artifact content was detected in the IMD output signals when excited at discrete frequencies of 5.0 and 8.0 Hz. The first natural frequency of the IMD, specific for this design, was measured at 16.25 Hz. This technique may be used to study in vivo the spinal kinematics in healthy lumbar motion segments and in patients suspected of having segmental instability, and can perhaps be of clinical diagnostic significance. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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