Abstract
Reducing the mechanical load on the human body through simulated reduced gravity can reveal important insight into locomotion biomechanics. The purpose of this study was to quantify the effects of simulated reduced gravity on muscle activation levels and lower limb biomechanics across a range of overground walking speeds. Our overall hypothesis was that muscle activation amplitudes would not decrease proportionally to gravity level. We recruited 12 participants (6 female, 6 male) to walk overground at 1.0, 0.76, 0.55, and 0.31 G for four speeds: 0.4, 0.8, 1.2, and 1.6 ms-1. We found that peak ground reaction forces, peak knee extension moment in early stance, peak hip flexion moment, and peak ankle extension moment all decreased substantially with reduced gravity. The peak knee extension moment at late stance/early swing did not change with gravity. The effect of gravity on muscle activity amplitude varied considerably with muscle and speed, often varying nonlinearly with gravity level. Quadriceps (rectus femoris, vastus lateralis, & vastus medialis) and medial gastrocnemius activity decreased in stance phase with reduced gravity. Soleus and lateral gastrocnemius activity had no statistical differences with gravity level. Tibialis anterior and biceps femoris increased with simulated reduced gravity in swing and stance phase, respectively. The uncoupled relationship between simulated gravity level and muscle activity have important implications for understanding biomechanical muscle functions during human walking and for the use of bodyweight support for gait rehabilitation after injury.
Highlights
Reduced gravity can reveal principles governing the mechanics and control of legged locomotion in healthy individuals and can enhance rehabilitation in humans and other animals with neurological deficits
Medial gastrocnemius EMG amplitude was smaller in the stance phase at lower gravity levels, but the lateral gastrocnemius and soleus EMG amplitude did not change with gravity
Our experiments found that reduced gravity decreased the ground reaction force magnitude and the ankle extension moment, but the activity of 2 of the 3 plantarflexors did not change with gravity
Summary
Reduced gravity can reveal principles governing the mechanics and control of legged locomotion in healthy individuals and can enhance rehabilitation in humans and other animals with neurological deficits. Legged locomotion requires the weight of the body to be supported while propulsive forces transferred from the feet to the ground progress the body.
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