As of May, we have 2 new #PhD students joining our group! 🥳
#LenaKloock successfully finished her master's thesis with us, visiting from @jlugiessen, and will now continue her work on #metabolicrate and #efficiency in the #Myonardo #musculoskeletal model. Glad to have you here, Lena!
New paper alert! Our paper investigating the effects of #muscular #coordination strategy on #knee joint forces using the @CAMSknee database & #musculoskeletal model #Myonardo was recently published in @MotorControlHK! Check it out and let us know what you think!
🔗https://doi.org/10.1123/mc.2021-0110
👤@HeikoWagner, Kim Boström, Marc de Lussanet, Christian Puta, @MyriamdeGraaf & Luis Mochizuki
Optimization Reduces Knee-Joint Forces During Walking and Squatting: Validating the Inverse Dynamics Approach for Full Body Movements on Instrumented Knee Prostheses

Because of the redundancy of our motor system, movements can be performed in many ways. While multiple motor control strategies can all lead to the desired behavior, they result in different joint and muscle forces. This creates opportunities to explore this redundancy, for example, for pain avoidance or reducing the risk of further injury. To assess the effect of different motor control optimization strategies, a direct measurement of muscle and joint forces is desirable, but problematic for medical and ethical reasons. Computational modeling might provide a solution by calculating approximations of these forces. In this study, we used a full-body computational musculoskeletal model to (a) predict forces measured in knee prostheses during walking and squatting and (b) study the effect of different motor control strategies (i.e., minimizing joint force vs. muscle activation) on the joint load and prediction error. We found that musculoskeletal models can accurately predict knee joint forces with a root mean squared error of <0.5 body weight (BW) in the superior direction and about 0.1 BW in the medial and anterior directions. Generally, minimization of joint forces produced the best predictions. Furthermore, minimizing muscle activation resulted in maximum knee forces of about 4 BW for walking and 2.5 BW for squatting. Minimizing joint forces resulted in maximum knee forces of 2.25 BW and 2.12 BW, that is, a reduction of 44% and 15%, respectively. Thus, changing the muscular coordination strategy can strongly affect knee joint forces. Patients with a knee prosthesis may adapt their neuromuscular activation to reduce joint forces during locomotion.

Human Kinetics
For his talk, @HeikoWagner gave an introduction to #Myonardo, the 3D musculoskeletal model developed by our lab and Predimo GmbH, which included a live demonstration of Myonardo's calculation & visualization options, as well as some #research applications.
#Announcement
We invite you to today's #LabTalk by #ProfHeikoWagner head of the #WagnerLab @MovementWagner on "Computermyography with the #Myonardo".
You can find the zoom link to join us here bit.ly/openlabhome