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HOWDY AGS!

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HOWDY AGS! Welcome to KINE 426! Exercise Biomechanics 4 hour lecture/lab class 3 contact hrs in lecture 3 contact hrs in laboratory Get on Board! Things move fast in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: HOWDY AGS!


1
HOWDY AGS!
  • Welcome to KINE 426!
  • Exercise Biomechanics
  • 4 hour lecture/lab class
  • 3 contact hrs in lecture
  • 3 contact hrs in laboratory

2
KINE 426 Team
  • Dr. John Lawler - lecture instructor
  • Jeff Hord, Jackie Perticone laboratory
    assistants you will conduct experiments!
  • John Lawler - support
  • Exercise Biomechanics
  • old class name Kinesiology

3
Kinesiology The Science of Movement
  • Kinein to move
  • Logos to discourse or study in a scientific
    manner
  • Used today Division, Departments, broad field

4
KINE 426
  • Exercise Biomechanics
  • Performance
  • - techniques
  • Exercise for Rehabilitation,
  • Health, Fitness

Usain Bolt
5
Exercise BiomechanicsIntegrative, Applied Science
  • Exercise Biomechanics application of mechanics
    to musculoskeletal system during exercise

6
KINE 426
  • Exercise Biomechanics
  • Integrative, applied, pragmatic science
  • Merging
  • - anatomy, physiology, mechanics
  • 3 prerequisites for class
  • - sports medicine
  • branch of orthopedics sports-related
    injuries

7
KINE 426
  • Exercise Biomechanics
  • Exercise for Health
  • Reduce risk of chronic diseases
  • Type II diabetes, obesity, heart disease,
    hypertension, cancer, Alzheimers
  • We have the genes of hunter gatherers
  • - engineered for activity to procure food

8
KINE 426
  • Exercise Biomechanics
  • Exercise for Health
  • Reduce risk of chronic diseases
  • Type II diabetes, obesity, heart disease,
    hypertension, cancer, Alzheimers
  • Exercise modifies specific proteins
  • Ex. NADPH oxidase, nitric oxide synthase,
  • brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF)

9
KINE 426 How to Score a great Grade!
  • Bee Prepared!
  • - Read presentations, text, and lab materials
    before class!
  • Take Notes during class
  • (re)Commit to memory formulae, standard units,
    muscle anatomy
  • Study Nightly (Dont Cram!)
  • Prepare for each laboratory!
  • Ask Content questions!
  • Practice, Practice, Practice!

10
KINE 426 How to Score a great Grade!
  • Bee Prepared!
  • Bee Positive, Professional, Persistent, and
    Passionate
  • (the 4 Ps!)

11
Its all about You

Summer 2010 31 As, 62 Bs, 7 Cs
Diligence!
12
Exercise Biomechanics
  • Represents the human body as a mechanical system
    or machine
  • Involves the application of physics and
    engineering principles during analysis of
    locomotion (walking, running, etc.), exercise,
    athletic activities, and rehabilitation (PT, OT,
    cardiac rehab.)
  • Young discipline --gt Technology
  • Computer-equipment interface, cell molecular
    biology

13
Course Content and Design
  • Based on a description and set of standards
    proposed by the American Alliance of Physical
    Education, Recreation, and Dance (AAHPERD) in
    1991
  • Course Description An integrative, mechanistic
    study of the biomechanics human motion during
    physical activity and exercise biology and
    mechanical properties of the human movement
    system including bones, tendons, ligaments,
    cartilage, skeletal muscle, joints, and other
    whole body mechanisms are investigated.

14
Exercise BiomechanicsCourse Structure
  • A. Whole Body Biomechanics
  • Muscular anatomy
  • Anatomical, linear, angular reference systems
  • Applying mechanics exercise
  • Kinematics (velocity, acceleration)
  • Kinetics (force, torque, power)
  • Exercise Applications
  • Performance techniques
  • Injury prevention, Rehabilitation
  • Use, design of exercise, sports equipment
  • Applications to daily living
  • Health
  • Workplace design (Ergonomics)

15
Exercise BiomechanicsCourse Structure
  • B. Tissue Biomechanics - components
  • Bones
  • Tendons
  • Ligaments
  • Cartilage
  • Injury prevention, Rehabilitation

16
The Human Mechanical System(Human Movement
System)
  • Skeletal muscle - driving force power
  • Connective tissue
  • Bones
  • Tendons
  • Ligaments
  • Cartilage
  • Fascia - skeletal muscle
  • Guidance system - receptors (ex. muscle spindles)
  • Processors (brain, spinal cord, motorneurons)

17
Exercise BiomechanicsCourse Structure
  • C. Skeletal Muscle Joint Biomechanics
  • Generation of force, velocity, power
  • TORQUE _at_ joints
  • Running
  • Back injuries
  • Weight training machine design

18
Exercise Biomechanics
  • Young discipline --gt Technology
  • Classic mechanical, engineering concepts cool
    tools
  • Computer-equipment interface, cell molecular
    biology
  • Digital Video
  • Laboratory
  • - Research

19
Exercise Biomechanics
  • Young discipline --gt Technology hands-on

20
Exercise Biomechanics
  • Young discipline --gt Technology hands-on

21
Using Exercise Biomechanics
  • Optimizing performance, health benefits of
    exercise
  • Minimizing chronic disease risk, physical
    fitness, brain development/preservation
  • Doing our best in athletic events
  • Playing safe
  • Pre-hab preparing connective tissues, muscle
  • Re-hab promoting recovery after injury

22
Applications (whats in it for me?) Teacher
Certification
  • Understanding the capabilities and limitations of
    students
  • Developing age-appropriate activities
  • Developing activities which are fun, safe, and of
    benefit to student health

23
Applications Wellness/Fitness
  • Understanding the health maintenance and
    rehabilitative processes in
  • Adult fitness
  • Qualified personnel
  • (ACSM certification)
  • National Strength Conditioning Association,
    KINE degree

24
Applications Applied Basic Exercise
Physiology, Motor Learning
  • Understanding the health maintenance and
    rehabilitative processes in
  • Athletic training
  • Triage of sports injuries
  • Rehab
  • Conditioning

25
Applications Applied Basic Exercise
Physiology, Motor Learning
  • Understanding the health maintenance and
    rehabilitative processes in
  • Cardiac Rehabilitation
  • Disease Prevention

26
Applications Applied Basic Exercise
Physiology, Motor Learning
  • Understanding the health maintenance and
    rehabilitative processes in
  • Physical Therapy
  • Rehab after surgery
  • Orthopedic injury

27
Applications Applied Basic Exercise
Physiology, Motor Learning
  • Understanding the health maintenance and
    rehabilitative processes in
  • Occupational Therapy
  • Relearning tasks of daily living

28
Applications Applied Basic Exercise
Physiology, Motor Learning
  • Understanding the health maintenance and
    rehabilitative processes in
  • Medicine
  • Diagnosing sprain severity
  • ACL graft surgery
  • Prosthetics
  • Arthritis

29
Applications Applied Basic Exercise
Physiology, Motor Learning
  • Understanding the health maintenance and
    rehabilitative processes in
  • Nursing
  • Recovery from
  • Orthopedic surgery

30
Applications Outdoor Education/Recreation
  • Knowing the physical limitations of human
    performance in outdoor recreation
  • Understanding the technical aspects of equipment
    use and design

31
Applications Applied Basic Exercise
Physiology, Motor Learning
  • Graduate School
  • Research
  • Aging
  • Osteoporosis
  • Parkinsons
  • Exercise
  • Sedentary lifestyle
  • Diabetes
  • Cardiovascular disease
  • Obesity
  • Muscular dystrophy
  • Spaceflight
  • http//hlknweb.tamu.edu
  • http//redox.tamu.edu

KINE 485, 491 Internships Work Study
32
Integrative, problem solving approach to Exercise
Biomechanics
Your mind should be a place where you work
things out, not store a bunch of stuff.-
Albert Einstein

33
Get on Board!

34
Get on Board!

Things move fast in the Summer!
35
Lets Jump into Biomechanics!

36
Integration of Disciplines --gt Exercise
Biomechanics
  • Anatomy the study of body structure and
    function
  • Gross (whole body) anatomy
  • Cellular anatomy
  • Physiology study of the integrated function of
    cells, tissues, and organ systems
  • Mechanics branch of physics which studies
    forces and their effects on mechanical structures

37
Integration of Disciplines --gt --gt Exercise
Biomechanics
  • Statics - branch of mechanics dealing with
    systems in a constant state of motion
  • Dynamics - branch of mechanics dealing with
    systems subject to acceleration
  • Biomechanics Application of mechanical
    principles in the study of living organisms and
    their function

38
ANATOMY
PHYSIOLOGY
MECHANICS
BIOMECHANICS
SPORTS MEDICINE
EXERCISE BIOMECHANICS
39
(No Transcript)
40
Problem solving - Complexity of Human Movement
  • In order to understand the basics, we will use
    the underlying principle of the human body as a
    mechanical machine.

41
  • Human-made Machine
  • Wears out with use
  • Must replace damaged parts with new ones
  • Designed for a limited number of purposes
  • IBM Deep Blue vs
  • Garry Kasparov (1997)
  • 2-1-3
  • Human Machine
  • May improve with use
  • Can repair itself (within limits ex. torn
    ligament)
  • Joint sprain
  • Muscle soreness
  • tendonitis
  • Capable of learning (diversity of purposes)

Andrea Zambrano
42
Problem Solving - Critical Thinking in
Biomechanics Asking how?
  • How do forces produced by muscles create movement
    at the joints?
  • How are running shoes designed to reduce injury
    and improve running performance?
  • How does joint cartilage act as a shock absorber?
  • How does genetics play a role in muscle power?
  • How do we design prosthetics (ex. artificial
    knee) to optimize function?

43
Critical Thinking in Biomechanics Asking How?
  • How?

44
Critical Thinking in Biomechanics Asking why,
how ?
  • How do muscle forces create torque at joints
  • The ability to produce rotation
  • Kinetics causal analysis of movement

Fm
joint
torque
45
Critical Thinking in Biomechanics Asking how,
why ?
  • Why are rotator cuff injuries common in swimming
    and in baseball/softball?
  • Why does a curve ball curve?
  • Why do joint sprains often take so long to heal?
  • Why are bone fractures common in the elderly?
  • Critical thinking is an important part of
    biomechanical analysis

46
Historical Timeline Combining Classic Knowledge
w/ Todays Tech
  • Aristotle (382 322 BC)
  • Student of Plato
  • Founded own school (lyceum)
  • Wrote extensively on philosophy, politics, logic,
    natural sciences, and physics
  • Much of his complete works were lost
  • Pictured the human body as a machine muscles
    cause an action which moves the bones at the
    joints

47
Historical Timeline Combining Classic Knowledge
w/ Todays Tech
  • Leonardo DaVinci (1452 1519)
  • Artist
  • Mona Lisa, Last Supper
  • Scientist
  • Anatomist (one of the first scientists to make a
    detailed record of human dissections)
  • Detailed descriptions of design of skeleton
  • Illustrated muscle origins and insertions

48
Historical Timeline Combining Classic Knowledge
w/ Todays Tech
  • Sir Isaac Newton (1643 1727)
  • Developed basic Laws of Motion
  • Invented calculus
  • Developed the theory of gravity which was held
    until updated by Einsteins theories
  • Founder of the Royal Academy of Sciences
  • Despite his contributions to science, Newtons
    primary investigations were into Biblical text

49
Historical Timeline Combining Classic Knowledge
w/ Todays Tech
  • Thomas Alva Edison
  • (from Menlo Park, NJ)
  • 1093 inventions including
  • the electric light bulb, voice transmitter
    (amplifier), answering machine, and phonograph
  • Invented motion pictures in 1888
  • He used a roll of film called a kinetoscope
  • Quote from Edison Genius is 1 inspiration and
    99 perspiration.

50
Historical Timeline Combining Classic Knowledge
w/ Todays Tech
  • Computers
  • transistor (1940s - common by 60s)
  • microcomputers
  • 1960s NASA
  • 1970s research
  • 1980s public - Apple, IBM, Compaq, Dell, etc.

51
Historical Timeline Combining Classic Knowledge
w/ Todays Tech
  • Digital Video
  • 1990s
  • Equipment
  • DV cameras
  • DVRs
  • Easy to interface with computer, video

52
Historical Timeline Combining Classic Knowledge
w/ Todays Tech
  • Exercise Biomechanics is only reaching maturity
    as a science
  • Principles - many are quite old and applied by
    Engineers for machines - Engineering approach to
    mechanics of the human body
  • Technology
  • Film analysis Digital video analysis
  • Interfacing with computers
  • Tools of cellular and molecular biology

53
Technology Biomechanics
  • Exercise Biomechanics is only reaching maturity
    as a science

Biomaterials - hydrogels
Gait analysis
http//www.datlof.com/8Axamal/docs/Marketing/jhu/J
E/index.htm
54
Technology Biomechanics
  • Exercise Biomechanics is only reaching maturity
    as a science

Orthoscopic surgery
Rehabilitation
55
Current Applications of Biomechanics Problem
Solving
  • Orthopedic Surgeons and Engineers
  • http//www.nisss.org/publications.html
  • Design of artificial hips and knees (prosthetics)
  • Design of support devices (knee braces, etc.)
  • Synthetic and natural replacements for structural
    tissues (cartilage replacement)

56
Current Applications of Biomechanics Problem
Solving
  • Physiologists and Engineers
  • EXAMPLES
  • Response of bone and connective tissue
    (ligaments, tendons) to exercise training, rehab

57
Current Applications of Biomechanics Problem
Solving
  • Space Scientists (NASA)
  • EXAMPLES
  • Adaptation to low gravity environments
  • Bone loss
  • Atrophy of skeletal muscle
  • Loss of blood volume, CV function
  • Orthostatic intolerance (fainting)

58
Current Applications of Biomechanics Problem
Solving
  • Exercise Biomechanists and Engineers
  • EXAMPLES
  • Design of running shoes
  • Design of exercise equipment (Nautilus and Cybex
    equipment, etc.)
  • Design of competitive sportswear, protective gear
  • Football pads and helmets
  • Low friction swimming, cycling, and running wear

59
Current Applications of Biomechanics Problem
Solvers
  • Giants of Whole Body Biomechanics
  • Peter Cavanagh -
  • Penn State University (1970s -
  • Today U. of Washington
  • NSBRI, NASA
  • Biomechanics of athletic and orthopedic shoewear
  • gt worked with Nike in the 70s, 80s
  • gt Runners World articles
  • gt concepts of cushioning (shock absorption)
  • gt elastic recoil (bounce) in shoes

60
Current Applications of Biomechanics Problem
Solvers
  • Early Giants of Tissue Biomechanics
  • Charlie Tipton - Exercise Physiologist (1960s -
    90s)
  • University of Iowa
  • Effect of Exercise on bone and connective tissue
    biomechanics and chemistry
  • Arthur Vailas - student

61
Current Applications of Biomechanics Problem
Solvers
  • Early Giants of Tissue Biomechanics
  • Savio Woo -
  • Biomedical Engineer (1970s - 80s)
  • UCSD, UPitt
  • Effect of exercise (increased forces/mechanical
    stress) and immobilization (decreased mechanical.
    stress) on connective tissue
  • Revolutionized Sports Injury Therapeutics!
  • Lifetime Achievement - ACSM
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