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    Muscle-driven forward dynamics simulation for the study of differences in muscle function during stair ascent and descent

    , Article Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part H: Journal of Engineering in Medicine ; October 1, 2009 Vol.223: 863-874 Selk Ghafari, A. (Ali) ; Meghdari, A ; Vossoughi, G. R ; Sharif University of Technology
    Abstract
    The main scope of this study is to analyse muscle-driven forward dynamics simulation of stair locomotion to understand the functional differences of individual muscles during the movement. A static optimization was employed to minimize a performance criterion based on the muscle energy consumption to resolve muscle redundancy during forward dynamics simulation. The proposed method was employed to simulate a musculoskeletal system with ten degrees of freedom in the sagittal plane and containing 18 Hill-type musculotendon actuators per leg. Simulation results illustrated that simulated joint kinematics closely tracked experimental quantities with root-mean-squared errors less than 1 degree. In... 

    Possible role for growth hormone in suppressing acylated ghrelin and hunger ratings during and after intermittent exercise of different intensities in obese individuals

    , Article Acta Medica Iranica ; Vol. 52, Issue. 1 , 2014 , pp. 29-37 ; ISSN: 1735-9694 Gholipour, M ; Kordi, M. R ; Taghikhani, M ; Ravasi, A. A ; Gaeini, A. A ; Tabrizi, A ; Sharif University of Technology
    Abstract
    Body weight is influenced by both food intake and energy expenditure. Acylated ghrelin enhances appetite, and its circulating level is suppressed by Growth Hormone. Data on the acylated ghrelin responses to exercise of different intensities in obese individuals are currently not available. This study examined the effects of an intermittent exercise protocol on acylated ghrelin levels and hunger ratings in obese people. Nine inactive male ran on the treadmill at 0900 with progressive intensities of 50, 60, 70, and 80% of VO2max for 10, 10, 5, and 2 min respectively. Blood samples were collected before the exercise at 0845 (-15 min as the resting values), after each workload (10, 23, 31, and... 

    Lumbopelvic muscle activation patterns in three stances under graded loading conditions: Proposing a tensegrity model for load transfer through the sacroiliac joints

    , Article Journal of Bodywork and Movement Therapies ; Vol. 18, Issue. 4 , October , 2014 , pp. 633-642 ; ISSN: 13608592 Pardehshenas, H ; Maroufi, N ; Sanjari, M. A ; Parnianpour, M ; Levin, S. M ; Sharif University of Technology
    Abstract
    Purpose: According to the conventional arch model of the pelvis, stability of the sacroiliac joints may require a predominance of form and force closure mechanisms: the greater the vertical shear force at the sacroiliac joints, the greater the reliance on self-bracing by horizontally or obliquely oriented muscles (such as the internal oblique). But what happens to the arch model when a person stands on one leg? In such cases, the pelvis no longer has imposts, leaving both the arch, and the arch model theory, without support. Do lumbopelvic muscle activation patterns in one-legged stances under load suggest compatibility with a different model? This study compares lumbopelvic muscle... 

    Elevation and orientation of external loads influence trunk neuromuscular response and spinal forces despite identical moments at the L5-S1 level

    , Article Journal of Biomechanics ; Vol. 47, issue. 12 , September , 2014 , p. 3035-3042 Ouaaid, Z. E ; Shirazi-Adl, A ; Plamondon, A ; Arjmand, N ; Sharif University of Technology
    Abstract
    A wide range of loading conditions involving external forces with varying magnitudes, orientations and locations are encountered in daily activities. Here we computed the effect on trunk biomechanics of changes in force location (two levels) and orientation (5 values) in 4 subjects in upright standing while maintaining identical external moment of 15. Nm, 30. N. m or 45. Nm at the L5-S1. Driven by measured kinematics and gravity/external loads, the finite element models yielded substantially different trunk neuromuscular response with moderate alterations (up to 24% under 45 Nm moment) in spinal loads as the load orientation varied. Under identical moments, compression and shear forces at... 

    Simulation of movement in three-dimensional musculoskeletal human lumbar spine using directional encoding-based neurocontrollers

    , Article Journal of Biomechanical Engineering ; Vol. 136, issue. 9 , 2014 Nasseroleslami, B ; Vossoughi, G ; Boroushaki, M ; Parnianpour, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    Abstract
    Despite development of accurate musculoskeletal models for human lumbar spine, the methods for prediction of muscle activity patterns in movements lack proper association with corresponding sensorimotor integrations. This paper uses the directional information of the Jacobian of the musculoskeletal system to orchestrate adaptive critic-based fuzzy neural controller modules for controlling a complex nonlinear redundant musculoskeletal system. The proposed controller is used to control a 3D 3-degree of freedom (DOF) musculoskeletal model of trunk, actuated by 18 muscles. The controller is capable of learning to control from sensory information, without relying on pre-assumed model parameters.... 

    A novel approach towards control of exoskeletal systems as an assistive device for human's upper extremity

    , Article JICTEE 2014 - 4th Joint International Conference on Information and Communication Technology, Electronic and Electrical Engineering ; 2014 Ghassemi, M ; Jahed, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    Abstract
    With increasing importance of exoskeletons as rehabilitation apparatuses, suitable and delicate control strategies has received much attention. In order to control the exoskeleton, there should be a complete understanding of torques produced by the limb itself which makes the musculoskeletal modeling of the limb essential but also complex. In addition, the musculoskeletal model can be used to discover the user's desired movement to control the exoskeleton. In this paper a complete musculoskeletal model for the elbow with two degrees of freedom is developed and simulated. Next the model is used to determine user's desired movement. Finally based on this evaluation, an exoskeleton model is... 

    Normal postural responses preceding shoulder flexion: Co-activation or asymmetric activation of transverse abdominis?

    , Article Journal of Back and Musculoskeletal Rehabilitation ; Vol. 27, issue. 4 , 2014 , p. 545-551 Davarian, S ; Maroufi, N ; Ebrahimi, E ; Parnianpour, M ; Farahmand, F ; Sharif University of Technology
    Abstract
    BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: It is suggested that activation of the transverse abdominis muscle has a stabilizing effect on the lumbar spine by raising intra-abdominal pressure without added disc compression. However, its feedforward activity has remained a controversial issue. In addition, research regarding bilateral activation of trunk muscles during a unilateral arm movement is limited. The aim of this study was to evaluate bilateral anticipatory activity of trunk muscles during unilateral arm flexion.MATERIALS AND METHODS: Eighteen healthy subjects (aged 25 ± 3.96 years) participated in this study and performed 10 trials of rapid arm flexion in response to a visual stimulus. The... 

    A novel stability and kinematics-driven trunk biomechanical model to estimate muscle and spinal forces

    , Article Medical Engineering and Physics ; Vol. 36, issue. 10 , 2014 , p. 1296-1304 Hajihosseinali, M ; Arjmand, N ; Shirazi-Adl, A ; Farahmand, F ; Ghiasi, M. S ; Sharif University of Technology
    Abstract
    An anatomically detailed eighteen-rotational-degrees-of-freedom model of the human spine using optimization constrained to equilibrium and stability requirements is developed and used to simulate several symmetric tasks in upright and flexed standing postures. Predictions of this stability and kinematics-driven (S. +. KD) model for trunk muscle forces and spine compressive/shear loads are compared to those of our existing kinematics-driven (KD) model where both translational and rotational degrees-of-freedom are included but redundancy is resolved using equilibrium conditions alone. Unlike the KD model, the S. +. KD model predicted abdominal co-contractions that, in agreement with... 

    Thickness as an important parameter in designing vascular grafts

    , Article 2014 21st Iranian Conference on Biomedical Engineering, ICBME 2014 ; Nov , 2014 , p. 40-43 Mohseni, M ; Shamloo, A ; Samani, S. A ; Dodel, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    Abstract
    The main goal of this study is to investigate the role of vascular graft thickness in wall stress gradient in anastomosis region. Atherosclerosis is a common heart disease causes high mortality rates every year. The gold standard treatment of atherosclerosis is replacing with autologous vein extracted from patient's body. Since proper autologous vein is limited, researchers have made efforts to achieve compliance engineered blood vessels. Mechanical stress has great effect on both smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells and it is considered as a stimulus in plaque formation. In this study, we evaluate the role of thickness in wall stress of anastomosis region. For this purpose, two... 

    Rehabilitation after ACL injury: A fluoroscopic study on the effects of type of exercise on the knee sagittal plane arthrokinematics

    , Article BioMed Research International ; Volume 2013 , July , 2013 ; 23146133 (ISSN) Norouzi, S ; Esfandiarpour, F ; Shakourirad, A ; Salehi, R ; Akbar, M ; Farahmand, F ; Sharif University of Technology
    2013
    Abstract
    A safe rehabilitation exercise for anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries needs to be compatible with the normal knee arthrokinematics to avoid abnormal loading on the joint structures. The objective of this study was to measure the amount of the anterior tibial translation (ATT) of the ACL-deficient knees during selective open and closed kinetic chain exercises. The intact and injured knees of fourteen male subjects with unilateral ACL injury were imaged using uniplanar fluoroscopy, while the subjects performed forward lunge and unloaded/loaded open kinetic knee extension exercises. The ATTs were measured from fluoroscopic images, as the distance between the tibial and femoral reference... 

    Trunk muscle fatigue and its implications in EMG-assisted biomechanical modeling

    , Article International Journal of Industrial Ergonomics ; Volume 43, Issue 5 , 2013 , Pages 425-429 ; 01698141 (ISSN) Haddad, O ; Mirka, G.A ; Sharif University of Technology
    2013
    Abstract
    Muscle fatigue affects the underlying EMG-force relationship on which EMG-assisted biomechanical models rely. The aim of this study was to evaluate the impact of short duration muscle fatigue on the muscle gain value. Participants performed controlled, isometric trunk extension exertions at 10, 20, and 30 degrees of trunk flexion and controlled isokinetic trunk extension exertions at 5 and 15°/sec on five separate days. Fatigue of the lumbar extensors was generated by moderate-intensity, trunk extension exertions. Participants performed controlled test contractions at defined intervals throughout the fatiguing bout and the EMG activities of trunk muscles were collected. These EMG data were... 

    Do the soft tissues located outside tibiofemoral joint have a role in bearing the compressive loads of the joint? An in-vitro study on sheep stifle joints

    , Article Gazzetta Medica Italiana Archivio per le Scienze Mediche ; Volume 172, Issue 7-8 , 2013 , Pages 595-601 ; 03933660 (ISSN) Hakkak, F ; Rostami, M ; Parnianpour, M ; Jabalameli, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    2013
    Abstract
    Aim. The compressive loads on the tibiofemoral joint are normally assumed to be borne solely via contact and pressing of the cartilage surfaces of tibia and femur. However, recent findings suggest that non-contact load-bearing mechanisms are active in the joint as well. In this context, a non-contact load-bearing mechanism involving soft tissue connections outside the tibiofemoral joint has been hypothesized as well. This paper addresses the validity of this hypothesis and the possible involvement of several soft tissue connections outside the joint. Methods. Sheep stifle (knee) joints were studied in vitro. The specimens were loaded in fixed displacement. Various soft tissues outside the... 

    Investigation on a developed wearable assistive device (WAD) in reduction lumbar muscles activity

    , Article Biomedical Engineering - Applications, Basis and Communications ; Volume 25, Issue 3 , 2013 ; 10162372 (ISSN) Heydari, H ; Hoviattalab, M ; Azghani, M. R ; Ramezanzadehkoldeh, M ; Parnianpour, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    2013
    Abstract
    A new wearable assistive device (WAD) was developed to decrease required force on the lumbar spine in static holding tasks. In order to obtain moments on lumbar spine in two conditions, with and without WAD, a biomechanical static model was used for estimation of external moments on lumbar spine. The results of biomechanical models indicated that there was a reduction in the lumbar moment ranging from 20% to 43% using WAD depending on the load and flexion angle. A total of 15 male healthy subjects were tested to experimentally verify the predicted reduction of external moments on the spine by wearing WAD. Normalized electromyography (EMG) of the right and left lumbar and thoracic erector... 

    Relative performances of artificial neural network and regression mapping tools in evaluation of spinal loads and muscle forces during static lifting

    , Article Journal of Biomechanics ; Volume 46, Issue 8 , 2013 , Pages 1454-1462 ; 00219290 (ISSN) Arjmand, N ; Ekrami, O ; Shirazi Adl, A ; Plamondon, A ; Parnianpour, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    2013
    Abstract
    Two artificial neural networks (ANNs) are constructed, trained, and tested to map inputs of a complex trunk finite element (FE) model to its outputs for spinal loads and muscle forces. Five input variables (thorax flexion angle, load magnitude, its anterior and lateral positions, load handling technique, i.e., one- or two-handed static lifting) and four model outputs (L4-L5 and L5-S1 disc compression and anterior-posterior shear forces) for spinal loads and 76 model outputs (forces in individual trunk muscles) are considered. Moreover, full quadratic regression equations mapping input-outputs of the model developed here for muscle forces and previously for spine loads are used to compare the... 

    A novel distributed model of the heart under normal and congestive heart failure conditions

    , Article Proceedings of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers, Part H: Journal of Engineering in Medicine ; Volume 227, Issue 4 , 2013 , Pages 362-372 ; 09544119 (ISSN) Ravanshadi, S ; Jahed, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    2013
    Abstract
    Conventional models of cardiovascular system frequently lack required detail and focus primarily on the overall relationship between pressure, flow and volume. This study proposes a localized and regional model of the cardiovascular system. It utilizes noninvasive blood flow and pressure seed data and temporal cardiac muscle regional activity to predict the operation of the heart under normal and congestive heart failure conditions. The analysis considers specific regions of the heart, namely, base, mid and apex of left ventricle. The proposed method of parameter estimation for hydraulic electric analogy model is recursive least squares algorithm. Based on simulation results and comparison... 

    How well do the muscular synergies extracted via non-negative matrix factorisation explain the variation of torque at shoulder joint?

    , Article Computer Methods in Biomechanics and Biomedical Engineering ; Volume 16, Issue 3 , 2013 , Pages 291-301 ; 10255842 (ISSN) Moghadam, M. N ; Aminian, K ; Asghari, M ; Parnianpour, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    2013
    Abstract
    The way central nervous system manages the excess degrees of freedom to solve kinetic redundancy of musculoskeletal system remains an open question. In this study, we utilise the concept of synergy formation as a simplifying control strategy to find the muscle recruitment based on summation of identified muscle synergies to balance the biomechanical demands (biaxial external torque) during an isometric shoulder task. A numerical optimisation-based shoulder model was used to obtain muscle activation levels when a biaxial external isometric torque is imposed at the shoulder glenohumeral joint. In the numerical simulations, 12 different shoulder torque vectors in the transverse plane are... 

    Effect of considering stability requirements on antagonistic muscle activities using a musculoskeletal model of the human lumbar spine

    , Article 2013 20th Iranian Conference on Biomedical Engineering, ICBME 2013 ; 2013 , Pages 260-264 Hajihoseinali, M ; Nickpour, H ; Arjmand, N ; Farahmand, F ; Sharif University of Technology
    2013
    Abstract
    The recruitment pattern of trunk muscles is determined using a three-dimensional model of the spine with two joints and six symmetric pairs of muscles in which both equilibrium and stability requirements are satisfied. Model predictions are verified using Anybody Modeling System (AMS) and Abaqus. The model is used to test the hypothesis that antagonistic muscle activities are necessary for the spinal stability. The model with stability constraints predicts muscle activities greater than those predicted without stability consideration. In agreement with experimental data, the stability-based model predicts antagonistic muscle activities. It is shown that spinal stability increases with trunk... 

    Simultaneous triple joint movement fuzzy control in FES-assisted rowing exercise

    , Article 2012 19th Iranian Conference of Biomedical Engineering, ICBME 2012, 20 December 2012 through 21 December 2012 ; December , 2012 , Pages 66-70 ; 9781467331302 (ISBN) Zarei, M ; Jahed, M ; Mehravar, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    2012
    Abstract
    Fuzzy Control of rowing exercise using Functional Electrical Stimulation (FES) concerns ankle, knee and hip joints. Muscular Modeling for each joint may contain two groups of muscles, namely extension and flexion. In the proposed method, joint controllers provide electrical stimulation pulses to the appropriate muscle group based on the trajectory error and according to a prescribed pattern designed for rowing exercise. Results indicate that the simulated Fuzzy control of desired angles closely match the experimental values for prescribed joints. Moreover, the robustness of the controller in presence of external disturbance is examined and the results show that the tracking of each joint... 

    Introducing a distributed model of the heart

    , Article Proceedings of the IEEE RAS and EMBS International Conference on Biomedical Robotics and Biomechatronics, 24 June 2012 through 27 June 2012 ; June , 2012 , Pages 419-424 ; 21551774 (ISSN) ; 9781457711992 (ISBN) Ravanshadi, S ; Jahed, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    2012
    Abstract
    Conventional models of cardiovascular system (CV) frequently lack required detail. Once utilized to study the heart function, these models focus primarily on the overall relationship between pressure, flow and volume. This study proposes a localized and regional model of the CV system. It utilizes non-invasive blood flow and pressure seed data and temporal cardiac muscle regional activation to predict the operation of the heart. Proposed localized analysis considers specific regions of the heart, namely base, mid and apex sections of the left ventricle. This modular system is based on a hydraulic electric analogy model, estimating desired parameters, namely resistance (R), compliance (C),... 

    Trunk muscles strength and endurance in chronic low back pain patients with and without clinical instability

    , Article Journal of Back and Musculoskeletal Rehabilitation ; Volume 25, Issue 2 , 2012 , Pages 123-129 ; 10538127 (ISSN) Davarian, S ; Maroufi, N ; Ebrahimi, I ; Farahmand, F ; Parnianpour, M ; Sharif University of Technology
    2012
    Abstract
    Objectives: Previous research has shown inconsistent findings regarding muscle endurance in chronic low back pain (CLBP). Questions also remain about muscle endurance in patients with clinical instability. The aim of this study was to investigate trunk muscles strength and endurance in CLBP patients with and without clinical instability. Methods: 32 CLBP patients (15 with and 17 without clinical instability) and 39 matched healthy subjects participated in this study. The standing extension test was performed to assess the strength and endurance of the lumbar extensors while recording their electromyographic activity. The patients' disability was evaluated using the Oswestry and Roland-Morris...