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Featured researches published by Frans Steenbrink.


Gait & Posture | 2012

Speeding up or slowing down?: Gait adaptations to preserve gait stability in response to balance perturbations

Laura Hak; Han Houdijk; Frans Steenbrink; Agali Mert; Peter van der Wurff; Peter J. Beek; Jaap H. van Dieën

It has frequently been proposed that lowering walking speed is a strategy to enhance gait stability and to decrease the probability of falling. However, previous studies have not been able to establish a clear relation between walking speed and gait stability. We investigated whether people do indeed lower walking speed when gait stability is challenged, and whether this reduces the probability of falling. Nine healthy subjects walked on the Computer Assisted Rehabilitation ENvironment (CAREN) system, while quasi-random medio-lateral translations of the walking surface were imposed at four different intensities. A self-paced treadmill setting allowed subjects to regulate their walking speed throughout the trials. Walking speed, step length, step frequency, step width, local dynamic stability (LDS), and margins of stability (MoS) were measured. Subjects did not change walking speed in response to the balance perturbations (p=0.118), but made shorter, faster, and wider steps (p<0.01) with increasing perturbation intensity. Subjects became locally less stable in response to the perturbations (p<0.01), but increased their MoS in medio-lateral (p<0.01) and backward (p<0.01) direction. In conclusion, not a lower walking speed, but a combination of decreased step length and increased step frequency and step width seems to be the strategy of choice to cope with medio-lateral balance perturbations, which increases MoS and thus decreases the risk of falling.


Medical & Biological Engineering & Computing | 2013

A real-time system for biomechanical analysis of human movement and muscle function

Antonie J. van den Bogert; Thomas Geijtenbeek; Oshri Even-Zohar; Frans Steenbrink; Elizabeth C. Hardin

Mechanical analysis of movement plays an important role in clinical management of neurological and orthopedic conditions. There has been increasing interest in performing movement analysis in real-time, to provide immediate feedback to both therapist and patient. However, such work to date has been limited to single-joint kinematics and kinetics. Here we present a software system, named human body model (HBM), to compute joint kinematics and kinetics for a full body model with 44 degrees of freedom, in real-time, and to estimate length changes and forces in 300 muscle elements. HBM was used to analyze lower extremity function during gait in 12 able-bodied subjects. Processing speed exceeded 120 samples per second on standard PC hardware. Joint angles and moments were consistent within the group, and consistent with other studies in the literature. Estimated muscle force patterns were consistent among subjects and agreed qualitatively with electromyography, to the extent that can be expected from a biomechanical model. The real-time analysis was integrated into the D-Flow system for development of custom real-time feedback applications and into the gait real-time analysis interactive lab system for gait analysis and gait retraining.


Journal of Biomechanics | 2009

Glenohumeral stability in simulated rotator cuff tears

Frans Steenbrink; J.H. de Groot; H.E.J. Veeger; F.C.T. van der Helm; Piet M. Rozing

Rotator cuff tears disrupt the force balance in the shoulder and the glenohumeral joint in particular, resulting in compromised arm elevation torques. The trade-off between glenohumeral torque and glenohumeral stability is not yet understood. We hypothesize that compensation of lost abduction torque will lead to a superior redirection of the reaction force vector onto the glenoid surface, which will require additional muscle forces to maintain glenohumeral stability. Muscle forces in a single arm position for five combinations of simulated cuff tears were estimated by inverse dynamic simulation (Delft Shoulder and Elbow Model) and compared with muscle forces in the non-injured condition. Each cuff tear condition was simulated both without and with an active modeling constraint for glenohumeral stability, which was defined as the condition in which the glenohumeral reaction force intersects the glenoid surface. For the simulated position an isolated tear of the supraspinatus only increased the effort of the other muscles with 8%, and did not introduce instability. For massive cuff tears beyond the supraspinatus, instability became a prominent factor: the deltoids were not able to fully compensate lost net abduction torque without introducing destabilizing forces; unfavorable abductor muscles (i.e. in the simulated position the subscapularis and the biceps longum) remain to compensate the necessary abduction torque; the teres minor appeared to be of vital importance to maintain glenohumeral stability. Adverse adductor muscle co-contraction is essential to preserve glenohumeral stability.


Journal of Biomechanics | 2013

Stepping strategies for regulating gait adaptability and stability

Laura Hak; Han Houdijk; Frans Steenbrink; Agali Mert; Peter van der Wurff; Peter J. Beek; Jaap H. van Dieën

Besides a stable gait pattern, gait in daily life requires the capability to adapt this pattern in response to environmental conditions. The purpose of this study was to elucidate the anticipatory strategies used by able-bodied people to attain an adaptive gait pattern, and how these strategies interact with strategies used to maintain gait stability. Ten healthy subjects walked in a Computer Assisted Rehabilitation ENvironment (CAREN). To provoke an adaptive gait pattern, subjects had to hit virtual targets, with markers guided by their knees, while walking on a self-paced treadmill. The effects of walking with and without this task on walking speed, step length, step frequency, step width and the margins of stability (MoS) were assessed. Furthermore, these trials were performed with and without additional continuous ML platform translations. When an adaptive gait pattern was required, subjects decreased step length (p<0.01), tended to increase step width (p=0.074), and decreased walking speed while maintaining similar step frequency compared to unconstrained walking. These adaptations resulted in the preservation of equal MoS between trials, despite the disturbing influence of the gait adaptability task. When the gait adaptability task was combined with the balance perturbation subjects further decreased step length, as evidenced by a significant interaction between both manipulations (p=0.012). In conclusion, able-bodied people reduce step length and increase step width during walking conditions requiring a high level of both stability and adaptability. Although an increase in step frequency has previously been found to enhance stability, a faster movement, which would coincide with a higher step frequency, hampers accuracy and may consequently limit gait adaptability.


Clinical Biomechanics | 2010

Teres major muscle activation relates to clinical outcome in tendon transfer surgery

Frans Steenbrink; Rob G. H. H. Nelissen; Carel G.M. Meskers; Michiel A. J. van de Sande; Piet M. Rozing; Jurriaan H. de Groot


Medical & Biological Engineering & Computing | 2015

Real-time visual feedback for gait retraining: toward application in knee osteoarthritis

Josien C. van den Noort; Frans Steenbrink; Sanne Roeles; Jaap Harlaar


Journal of Biomechanics | 2010

The relation between increased deltoid activation and adductor muscle activation due to glenohumeral cuff tears.

Frans Steenbrink; Carel G.M. Meskers; Rob G. H. H. Nelissen; Jurriaan H. de Groot


Medical & Biological Engineering & Computing | 2018

Gait stability in response to platform, belt, and sensory perturbations in young and older adults

Sanne Roeles; Philip Rowe; Sjoerd M. Bruijn; Craig Childs; Georgia Tarfali; Frans Steenbrink; Mirjam Pijnappels


Journal of Applied Biomechanics | 2018

OpenSim Versus Human Body Model: A Comparison Study for the Lower Limbs During Gait

Antoine Motte dit Falisse; Sam Van Rossom; Johannes Gijsbers; Frans Steenbrink; Ben J. H. van Basten; Ilse Jonkers; Antonie J. van den Bogert; Friedl De Groote


International Society for Posture and Gait Research World Congress | 2017

Gait perturbations to discriminate between older adults with and without history of falls

Sanne Roeles; Philip Rowe; Sjoerd M. Bruijn; Craig Childs; Frans Steenbrink; Mirjam Pijnappels

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Sanne Roeles

The Hague University of Applied Sciences

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Han Houdijk

VU University Amsterdam

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Jaap Harlaar

VU University Medical Center

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Carel G.M. Meskers

VU University Medical Center

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Laura Hak

VU University Amsterdam

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Piet M. Rozing

Leiden University Medical Center

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Agali Mert

United Kingdom Ministry of Defence

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Craig Childs

University College London

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