Effects of obesity on the biomechanics of walking at different speeds

被引:261
作者
Browning, Raymond C. [1 ]
Kram, Rodger [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Colorado, Dept Integrat Physiol, Locomot Lab, Boulder, CO 80309 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1249/mss.0b013e318076b54b
中图分类号
G8 [体育];
学科分类号
04 ; 0403 ;
摘要
Purpose: Walking is a recommended form of exercise for the treatment of obesity, but walking may be a critical source of biomechanical loads that link obesity and musculoskeletal pathology, particularly knee osteoarthritis. We hypothesized that compared with normal-weight adults 1) obese adults would have greater absolute ground-reaction forces (GRF) during walking, but their GRF would be reduced at slower walking speeds; and 2) obese adults would have greater sagittal-plane absolute leg-joint moments at a given walking speed, but these moments would be reduced at slower walking speeds. Methods: We measured GRF and recorded sagittal-plane kinematics of 20 adults (10 obese and 10 normal weight) as they walked on a level, force-measuring treadmill at six speeds (0.5-1.75 m.s(-1)). We calculated sagittal-plane net muscle moments at the hip, knee, and ankle. Results: Compared with their normal-weight peers, obese adults had much greater absolute GRT (N), stance-phase sagittal-plane net muscle moments (N.m) and step width (m). Conclusions: Greater sagittal-plane knee moments in the obese subjects suggest that they walked with greater knee-joint loads than normal-weight adults. Walking slower reduced GRF and net muscle moments and may be a risk-lowering strategy for obese adults who wish to walk for exercise. When obese subjects walked at 1.0 versus 1.5 m.s(-1), peak sagittal-plane knee moments were 45% less. Obese subjects walking at approximately 1.1 m.s(-1) would have the same absolute peak sagittal-plane knee net muscle moment as nor-mal-weight subjects when they walk at their typical preferred speed of 1.4 m.s(-1).
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收藏
页码:1632 / 1641
页数:10
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