Equilibrium and Human Movement: Basic Biomechanics, 4 Edition Susan J. Hall
Equilibrium and Human Movement: Basic Biomechanics, 4 Edition Susan J. Hall
Equilibrium and Human Movement: Basic Biomechanics, 4 Edition Susan J. Hall
Equilibrium and
Human Movement
Basic Biomechanics, 4th edition
Susan J. Hall
Objectives
• Define torque, quantify resultant torques, and identify
the factors that affect resultant joint torques
• Identify the mechanical advantages associated with the
different classes of levers and explain the concept of
leverage within the human body
• Solve basic quantitative problems using the equations
of static equilibrium
• Define center of gravity and explain the significance of
center of gravity location in the human body
• Explain how mechanical factors affect the body’s
stability
Equilibrium
Torque
• T = Fd
Moment arm: the
perpendicular distance
from force’s line of
action to axis of rotation
Moment arm sometimes
referred to as force arm
A force directed through
axis of rotation (centric)
causes no rotation.
Equilibrium
Torque
• In the body, moment
arm of muscle is the
perpendicular
distance between
muscle's line of pull
and joint center
• Largest moment
arm at an angle of
pull ~900
Equilibrium
Torque
The depiction is of a
first-class lever
because muscle
force and resistive
force act on
opposite sides of the
fulcrum.
Second Class Levers
Key Term
• Second-class lever: A lever for which the
muscle force and resistive force act on the
same side of the fulcrum, with the muscle
force acting through a moment arm longer
than that through which the resistive force
acts.
• Due to its mechanical advantage, the
required muscle force is smaller than the
resistive force.
– The slide shows plantar
flexion against resistance
Figure 4.4
(e.g., a standing heel raise
exercise).
– FM = muscle force; FR =
resistive force; MM = moment
arm of the muscle force; MR
= moment arm of the resistive
force.
– When the body is raised, the
ball of the foot, the point
about which the foot rotates,
is the fulcrum (O).
– Because MM is greater than
MR, FM is less than FR.
Third Class Levers
Key Term
• Third-class lever: A lever for which the muscle
force and resistive force act on the same side
of the fulcrum, with the muscle force acting
through a moment arm shorter than that through
which the resistive force acts.
• The mechanical advantage is thus less than 1.0,
so the muscle force has to be greater than the
resistive force to produce torque equal to that
produced by the resistive force.
– The slide shows
elbow flexion
Figure 6-21
Analysis of Anatomical Levers