Joint Load Data: ankle_tibiotalar

Peak joint contact forces and moments during activities of daily living, used for implant fatigue design and prosthetics loading analysis. Covers five joints: hip (10 activities: walking, stair ascent/descent, sit-to-stand, stumble recovery, standing, running, cycling, nordic cane walking, swimming), knee (8 activities: walking, stair ascent/descent, deep knee bend, sit-to-stand, fast walking, downhill, cycling stationary), lumbar spine L4/L5 (9 activities: standing, sitting, lifting squat/stoop, forward flexion, supine, walking, seated vibration, rowing), shoulder glenohumeral (6 activities: abduction 90 deg, forward flexion 90 deg, overhead 180 deg, pushing, pulling, carrying), and ankle tibiotalar (5 activities: walking, running, stair ascent/descent, tiptoe). Hip, knee, shoulder, and ankle forces are in multiples of body weight (BW). Spine loads use intradiscal pressure (MPa) from in vivo transducer measurements. Data primarily from OrthoLoad database (Bergmann et al., Charité Berlin) instrumented implants, Wilke 1999 L4/L5 disc pressure, and published gait analysis studies. Relevant to ISO 14242-1 (hip simulator), ISO 14243-1 (knee simulator), and ASTM F2028 (total ankle) loading conditions.

Biomedical Engineeringjoint: ankle_tibiotalar3 rows
jointactivityforce directionforce max BW (BW or MPa for spine)force min BW (BW or MPa for spine)force peak BW (BW (body weight multiples) or MPa for spine)loading phasemoment peak Nm per BW (Nm/BW)notespopulation
ankle_tibiotalarrunning_joggingresultant_compressive_BW1068mid-stanceN/ASignificant increase vs walking; Achilles tendon force 6-8 BW; ground contact shorter duration but higher peak; relevant for ankle sport injury and prosthetic foot designadults_healthy
ankle_tibiotalarstair_ascentresultant_compressive_BW533.8push_off_phaseN/ALower than running; comparable to level walking peak; plantar flexion power generation for step elevation; calf muscle activation dominantadults_healthy
ankle_tibiotalarstair_descentresultant_compressive_BW5.53.24.2loading_responseN/AControlled dorsiflexion eccentric loading on descent; slightly higher than ascent; Achilles tendon and anterior tibialis co-activation; ankle dorsiflexion range critical for safe descentadults_healthy

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