Donati Marco, Camomilla Valentina, Vannozzi Giuseppe, Cappozzo Aurelio
Department of Human Movement and Sport Sciences, Istituto Universitario di Scienze Motorie, Piazza Lauro de Bosis, 15 00194 Roma, Italy.
J Biomech. 2008 Jul 19;41(10):2219-26. doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2008.04.018. Epub 2008 Jun 11.
The quantitative description of joint mechanics during movement requires the reconstruction of the position and orientation of selected anatomical axes with respect to a laboratory reference frame. These anatomical axes are identified through an ad hoc anatomical calibration procedure and their position and orientation are reconstructed relative to bone-embedded frames normally derived from photogrammetric marker positions and used to describe movement. The repeatability of anatomical calibration, both within and between subjects, is crucial for kinematic and kinetic end results. This paper illustrates an anatomical calibration approach, which does not require anatomical landmark manual palpation, described in the literature to be prone to great indeterminacy. This approach allows for the estimate of subject-specific bone morphology and automatic anatomical frame identification. The experimental procedure consists of digitization through photogrammetry of superficial points selected over the areas of the bone covered with a thin layer of soft tissue. Information concerning the location of internal anatomical landmarks, such as a joint center obtained using a functional approach, may also be added. The data thus acquired are matched with the digital model of a deformable template bone. Consequently, the repeatability of pelvis, knee and hip joint angles is determined. Five volunteers, each of whom performed five walking trials, and six operators, with no specific knowledge of anatomy, participated in the study. Descriptive statistics analysis was performed during upright posture, showing a limited dispersion of all angles (less than 3 deg) except for hip and knee internal-external rotation (6 deg and 9 deg, respectively). During level walking, the ratio of inter-operator and inter-trial error and an absolute subject-specific repeatability were assessed. For pelvic and hip angles, and knee flexion-extension the inter-operator error was equal to the inter-trial error-the absolute error ranging from 0.1 deg to 0.9 deg. Knee internal-external rotation and ab-adduction showed, on average, inter-operator errors, which were 8% and 28% greater than the relevant inter-trial errors, respectively. The absolute error was in the range 0.9-2.9 deg.
运动过程中关节力学的定量描述需要重建选定解剖轴相对于实验室参考系的位置和方向。这些解剖轴通过专门的解剖校准程序来确定,其位置和方向相对于通常从摄影测量标记位置导出并用于描述运动的骨内框架进行重建。解剖校准在受试者内部和受试者之间的可重复性对于运动学和动力学最终结果至关重要。本文阐述了一种解剖校准方法,该方法不需要文献中所述的易产生很大不确定性的解剖标志手动触诊。这种方法能够估计受试者特定的骨骼形态并自动识别解剖框架。实验过程包括通过摄影测量对覆盖有薄层软组织的骨骼区域上选定的表面点进行数字化处理。也可以添加有关内部解剖标志位置的信息,例如使用功能方法获得的关节中心。由此获取的数据与可变形模板骨的数字模型进行匹配。因此,确定了骨盆、膝盖和髋关节角度的可重复性。五名志愿者参与了该研究,每人进行了五次步行试验,还有六名对解剖学没有专门知识的操作员。在直立姿势期间进行了描述性统计分析,结果显示除了髋关节和膝关节的内 - 外旋转(分别为6度和9度)外,所有角度的离散度都有限(小于3度)。在水平行走期间,评估了操作员间和试验间误差的比率以及受试者特定的绝对可重复性。对于骨盆和髋关节角度以及膝关节屈伸,操作员间误差等于试验间误差 - 绝对误差范围为0.1度至0.9度。膝关节内 - 外旋转和内 - 外展平均显示,操作员间误差分别比相关试验间误差大8%和28%。绝对误差在0.9 - 2.9度范围内。