Litcius/Paper detail

Angular momentum regulation may dictate the slip severity in young adults

Mohammad Moein Nazifi, Kurt E. Beschorner, Pilwon Hur

2020PLoS ONE17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Falls cause negative impacts on society and the economy. Slipping is a common initiating event for falling. Yet, individuals differ in their ability to recover from slips. Persons experiencing mild slips can accommodate the perturbation without falling, whereas severe slipping is associated with inadequate or slow pre- or post-slip control that make these individuals more prone to fall. Knowing the discrepancies between mild and severe slippers in kinematic and kinetic variables improves understanding of adverse control responsible for severe slipping. This study examined differences across these participants with respect to center of mass (COM) height, sagittal angular momentum (H), upper body kinematics, and the duration of single/double phase. Possible causality of such relationships was also studied by observing the time-lead of the deviations. Twenty healthy young adults performed walking trials in dry and slippery conditions. They were classified into mild and severe slippers based on their heel slipping speed. No inter-group differences were observed in the upper extremity kinematics. It was found that mild and severe slippers do not differ in the studied variables during normal gait; however, they do show significant differences through slipping. Compared to mild slippers, sever slippers lowered their COM height following a slip, presented higher H, and shortened their single support phase (p-value<0.05 for all). Based on the time-lead observed in H over all other variables suggests that failure to control angular momentum may influence slip severity.

Topics & Concepts

SlippingKinematicsPhysical medicine and rehabilitationSlip (aerodynamics)Angular momentumFalling (accident)MechanicsMedicinePhysicsPhysical therapyControl theory (sociology)MathematicsComputer scienceClassical mechanicsControl (management)GeometryEnvironmental healthArtificial intelligenceThermodynamicsBalance, Gait, and Falls PreventionCerebral Palsy and Movement DisordersInjury Epidemiology and Prevention
Angular momentum regulation may dictate the slip severity in young adults | Litcius