9/3c Biomechanics Part 2 Flashcards

1
Q

what does force cause

A

motion

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2
Q

internal forces

A

muscle force/contraction - any force within the body

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3
Q

external force

A

produced by forces acting outside of the body

  • gravity + the weight of a part of the body
  • wind
  • friction
  • change in movement in response to external forces
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4
Q

musculoskeletal forces

A

humans are constantly producing internal forces (predominantly during muscle activation) in order to control external forces during movement tasks

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5
Q

active force

A

muscle activates

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6
Q

passive force

A

forces are generated by passive tension in stretched tissues

-someone moving your body OR doing a quad stretch

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7
Q

point of application

A

where forces are being applied in relation to the axis of rotation

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8
Q

center of mass

A

location where the gravitational forces are being applied at any limb/element of the body

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9
Q

angle of insertion

A
  • orientation of the muscles insertion relative to the long axis of the bone
  • when you change the angle of insertion, the total force is broken into x and y components
  • at 90 degrees force is optimal
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10
Q

muscle moment arm

A

distance between the force that is acting on the body and its axis of rotation

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11
Q

what does muscle force do to a joint?

A

it creates a torque/moment about the joint allowing for rotation

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12
Q

linear force measure

A

N or lbs

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13
Q

angular force measure

A

Nm or lbft

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14
Q

static rotary equilibrium

A

internal moment = external moment:
(Muscle Force x Muscle Force Distance from joint axis of rotation) = ((mass of limb x gravity) x center of mass distance from the joint axis of rotation)

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15
Q

Static linear equilibrium

A

internal force = external force:

force generated by the muscle = reaction force pushing off of joint that muscle is acting on

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16
Q

in which position would a PT have to apply more force to maintain specific rotary equilibrium?

A

the position where the moment arm is less

17
Q

Is a shorter moment arm advantageous to a patient?

A

Yes and no - the patient has to exert more force, but it makes it harder for the PT to then break their position

18
Q

Muscle Activation

A

I - Isometric
C - Concentric
E - Eccentric

19
Q

Isometric activation

A

muscle produces a force while maintaining a constant length. STATIC

20
Q

Concentric activation

A

Muscle force overcomes the external force and muscle shortens. M(internal) > M(external)

21
Q

Eccentric activation

A

Muscle produces a force while lengthening. Negatives at the gym, muscle resists being pulled apart - does NOT actively lengthen. M(internal) < M(external)

22
Q

Can muscles have multiple actions based on the position of segments?***

A

YES

23
Q

Does internal moment arm change when the joint position changes?***

A

YES - think about a rod with an axis of rotation closer to you vs farther away from you and you are the muscle force. it will be easier for you to rotate the rod when the axis of rotation is farther away from you

24
Q

Conceptual framework for muscle

A

when a muscle contracts the free-ist segment moves
a muscle action can be produced if a moment arm/mechanical advantage is present for that plane of motion (same muscle can have multiple actions depending on the moment arm and axis of rotation)

25
Q

agonist muscle

A

muscle or muscle group most directly related to initiation or execution of a movement
-biceps agonist for elbow flexion

26
Q

antagonist muscle

A

muscle or muscle group that has the opposite action of the agonist muscle group
-triceps antagonist for elbow flexion

27
Q

muscle synergy

A

muscles work together in synergy to produce a movement

28
Q

force couples

A

forces in opposite directions produce a movement in 1 direction
-straight leg raise: force couple between your erector spinae, iliospoas, and sartorius