Abstract

The purpose of this study was to determine if an on-body personal lift assistive device (PLAD)11Commonly used Abbreviations are: Personal Lift Assistive Device (PLAD); Thoracic Erector Spinae (TES); Lumbar Erector Spinae (LES). affected oxygen consumption during a continuous lifting task and to investigate if any effect could be explained by differences in muscle activity or lifting technique. The PLAD, worn like a back-pack, contains a spring-cable mechanism that assists the back musculature during lifting, lowering, and forward bending tasks. Males (n = 15) lifted and lowered a box loaded to 10% of their maximum back strength at 6 times/minute for 15-minutes using a free-style technique under two conditions: wearing and not wearing the PLAD. Oxygen consumption was collected continuously for the first condition; then the participants rested until their heart rates returned to resting levels before repeating the protocol for the second condition. Knee flexion was monitored using Liberty sensors at the hip, knee, and ankle. EMG of the thoracic and lumbar erector spinae (TES, LES), biceps femoris, rectus femoris and gluteus maximus were gathered using a Bortec AMT-8 channel system. VO2 measures were averaged across the duration (15 min) for each condition. Results showed no differences between oxygen consumption during the PLAD and no PLAD conditions. When wearing the PLAD, the TES demonstrated an 8.4% EMG reduction when lowering the box while the biceps femoris showed a 14% reduction while lifting the box. Knee angles, used as a proxy for stoop or squat lifts, were highly variable for both conditions. In conclusion, the PLAD had no effect on oxygen consumption and, therefore, neither workers nor employers should increase the tasks demands when wearing this ergonomic aid. Relevance to industryWhile the PLAD reduced musculoskeletal effort required by back musculature, loads or rates of lifting should not be increased since there is no change in the overall physical demand of the task.

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