Predictive simulation of single-leg landing scenarios for ACL injury risk factors evaluation.

The Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) rupture is a very common knee injury during sport activities. Landing after jump is one of the most prominent human body movements that can lead to such an injury. The landing-related ACL injury risk factors have been in the spotlight of research interest. Over t...

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Main Authors: Evgenia Moustridi, Konstantinos Risvas, Konstantinos Moustakas
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2023-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0282186
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author Evgenia Moustridi
Konstantinos Risvas
Konstantinos Moustakas
author_facet Evgenia Moustridi
Konstantinos Risvas
Konstantinos Moustakas
author_sort Evgenia Moustridi
collection DOAJ
description The Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) rupture is a very common knee injury during sport activities. Landing after jump is one of the most prominent human body movements that can lead to such an injury. The landing-related ACL injury risk factors have been in the spotlight of research interest. Over the years, researchers and clinicians acquire knowledge about human movement during daily-life activities by organizing complex in vivo studies that feature high complexity, costs and technical and most importantly physical challenges. In an attempt to overcome these limitations, this paper introduces a computational modeling and simulation pipeline that aims to predict and identify key parameters of interest that are related to ACL injury during single-leg landings. We examined the following conditions: a) landing height, b) hip internal and external rotation, c) lumbar forward and backward leaning, d) lumbar medial and lateral bending, e) muscle forces permutations and f) effort goal weight. Identified on related research studies, we evaluated the following risk factors: vertical Ground Reaction Force (vGRF), knee joint Anterior force (AF), Medial force (MF), Compressive force (CF), Abduction moment (AbdM), Internal rotation moment (IRM), quadricep and hamstring muscle forces and Quadriceps/Hamstrings force ratio (Q/H force ratio). Our study clearly demonstrated that ACL injury is a rather complicated mechanism with many associated risk factors which are evidently correlated. Nevertheless, the results were mostly in agreement with other research studies regarding the ACL risk factors. The presented pipeline showcased promising potential of predictive simulations to evaluate different aspects of complicated phenomena, such as the ACL injury.
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spelling doaj.art-4a07d30d53b140539230dd58ba4433042023-04-21T05:35:01ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032023-01-01183e028218610.1371/journal.pone.0282186Predictive simulation of single-leg landing scenarios for ACL injury risk factors evaluation.Evgenia MoustridiKonstantinos RisvasKonstantinos MoustakasThe Anterior Cruciate Ligament (ACL) rupture is a very common knee injury during sport activities. Landing after jump is one of the most prominent human body movements that can lead to such an injury. The landing-related ACL injury risk factors have been in the spotlight of research interest. Over the years, researchers and clinicians acquire knowledge about human movement during daily-life activities by organizing complex in vivo studies that feature high complexity, costs and technical and most importantly physical challenges. In an attempt to overcome these limitations, this paper introduces a computational modeling and simulation pipeline that aims to predict and identify key parameters of interest that are related to ACL injury during single-leg landings. We examined the following conditions: a) landing height, b) hip internal and external rotation, c) lumbar forward and backward leaning, d) lumbar medial and lateral bending, e) muscle forces permutations and f) effort goal weight. Identified on related research studies, we evaluated the following risk factors: vertical Ground Reaction Force (vGRF), knee joint Anterior force (AF), Medial force (MF), Compressive force (CF), Abduction moment (AbdM), Internal rotation moment (IRM), quadricep and hamstring muscle forces and Quadriceps/Hamstrings force ratio (Q/H force ratio). Our study clearly demonstrated that ACL injury is a rather complicated mechanism with many associated risk factors which are evidently correlated. Nevertheless, the results were mostly in agreement with other research studies regarding the ACL risk factors. The presented pipeline showcased promising potential of predictive simulations to evaluate different aspects of complicated phenomena, such as the ACL injury.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0282186
spellingShingle Evgenia Moustridi
Konstantinos Risvas
Konstantinos Moustakas
Predictive simulation of single-leg landing scenarios for ACL injury risk factors evaluation.
PLoS ONE
title Predictive simulation of single-leg landing scenarios for ACL injury risk factors evaluation.
title_full Predictive simulation of single-leg landing scenarios for ACL injury risk factors evaluation.
title_fullStr Predictive simulation of single-leg landing scenarios for ACL injury risk factors evaluation.
title_full_unstemmed Predictive simulation of single-leg landing scenarios for ACL injury risk factors evaluation.
title_short Predictive simulation of single-leg landing scenarios for ACL injury risk factors evaluation.
title_sort predictive simulation of single leg landing scenarios for acl injury risk factors evaluation
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0282186
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