Survey of Formal Methods of Hip Joint Center Calculation in Human Studies

Functional hip joint center (HJC) calculation involves recording movements of femur relative to acetabulum through markers placed on skin around thigh and pelvis. This non-invasive method of finding hip joint center involves either fitting a geometric sphere onto marker trajectories or coordinate transformation techniques which find the point with least movement in local frame with respect to global frame. A survey study by Ehrig et al has evaluated both categories of formal methods through virtual simulation and also contributed another algorithm known as “SCoRE”(Systematic center of rotation estimation). This algorithm gives an accuracy of 0.5 cm with 20 degree range of motion (ROM) and claimed to be most accurate with both segments in motion. This paper reviews the studies using this method to calculate hip joint center. Also a review of studies using Ultrasound as a validation method has been provided. This forms the basis to the possibility of using Ultrasonic sensors to be placed along with markers to measure the relative movement of markers with respect to bone in vivo. This paper provides a survey of studies performed on human subjects either in vivo (live humans) or ex vivo (cadaver) to help an experimenter or researcher pick the best relevant technique matching their experimentation requirement including soft tissue artifact factor.

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