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ABSTRACT:
In the present
study, the motions of the different postural joints involved in reaching
tasks starting from an upright posture were examined and the influence
of gender on the movement pattern was determined. Specifically, motion
about the ankle, knee, and hip joints as well as angular motion of the
thoracic segment with respect to the sacrum (lumbar motion) were measured.
Ten healthy subjects (5 men, 5 women) reached for targets at 2 locations
normalized to the subject's trunk length, arm length, and hip height.
To reach each target, subjects had to bend the trunk forward. Joint motion
was measured with a Selspot motion analysis system. The change in joint
angle (measured in the sagittal plane from an upright standing position
to the final posture adopted at target contact) was calculated for each
joint. In addition, the ratio of the changes in joint angle of the lumbar
spine and the hip (spine/hip ratio) was determined. Compared with female
subjects, male subjects exhibited, on average, greater rotation about
the lumbar spine and less rotation about the hips and knees. The spine/hip
rations for men and women were dramatically different. Men had, on average,
a spine/hip ration of 1.20 and women an average of 0.20. Those data reveal
that 2 vastly different movement patterns are employed during reaching
tasks that necessitate some forward bending of the trunk. Men tend to
flex equally about the hips and spine, with minimal flexion about the
knees, whereas women flex primarily about the hips and knees, with minimal
flexion about the spine. Thus, the kinematic redundancy is resolved differently
depending on gender.
Keywords:
gender, hip, kinematic redundancy, reaching, spine |