New Mechanics of Generic Musculo-Skeletal Injury
Vladimir G. Ivancevic

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new hypothesis that musculo-skeletal injuries are caused by a Euclidean jolt, a sudden impulsive load affecting joints in multiple degrees of freedom simultaneously, formalized through coupled Newton-Euler dynamics.
Contribution
It proposes the coupled-loading-rate hypothesis and formulates the SE(3)-jolt dynamics as a primary injury mechanism, extending previous force law applications to joint injuries.
Findings
SE(3)-jolt causes joint dislocations and disclinations
Formulation of coupled Newton-Euler dynamics for joint injury
Application of Cosserat continuum model to injury analysis
Abstract
Prediction and prevention of musculo-skeletal injuries is an important aspect of preventive health science. Using as an example a human knee joint, this paper proposes a new coupled-loading-rate hypothesis, which states that a generic cause of any musculo-skeletal injury is a Euclidean jolt, or SE(3)-jolt, an impulsive loading that hits a joint in several coupled degrees-of-freedom simultaneously. Informally, it is a rate-of-change of joint acceleration in all 6-degrees-of-freedom simultaneously, times the corresponding portion of the body mass. In the case of a human knee, this happens when most of the body mass is on one leg with a semi-flexed knee -- and then, caused by some external shock, the knee suddenly `jerks'; this can happen in running, skiing, sports games (e.g., soccer, rugby) and various crashes/impacts. To show this formally, based on the previously defined covariant…
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Taxonomy
TopicsShoulder Injury and Treatment · Mechanics and Biomechanics Studies · Sports Performance and Training
