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Hip-belt load sharing reduces peak shoulder pressure across walking slopes during heavy load carriage
Inge, Madeline M. ; Rizeq, Hedaya N. ; Slider, Amy ; Sessoms, Pinata H. ; Silverman, Anne K. ; Sturdy, Jordan T.
Inge, Madeline M.
Rizeq, Hedaya N.
Slider, Amy
Sessoms, Pinata H.
Silverman, Anne K.
Sturdy, Jordan T.
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2023-04
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Abstract
Musculoskeletal injury to the spine and lower back resulting from heavy load carriage (30–40 kg) is common among military service members. Static peak pressure is a reliable parameter for predicting discomfort. The effect of using a hip belt on shoulder pressure is not well understood. This study aimed to quantify the pressure under shoulder straps when carrying a backpack with and without a hip belt. Three military service members wore a helmet and body armor (~6.5kg) and carried a backpack in two attachment conditions: (1) entirely shoulder borne, and (2) with a hip-belt engaged, all totaling 40% body weight. Participants walked at three different slope conditions (10° downhill, level, and 10° uphill) at 1.15 m/s for each backpack condition. Peak pressure across both shoulders was extracted from each condition. Shoulder borne peak pressure (down: 36.33 kPa; level: 37.67 kPa; up: 36.67 kPa) was greater than the hip belt (down: 29.67 kPa; level: 24.67 kPa; up: 29.67 kPa). Walking with the hip belt engaged compared with the shoulder borne-only backpack resulted in ~9 kPa smaller peak shoulder pressure on average across all three slopes, indicating that peak pressure is reduced when using a hip belt, although greater participant numbers are needed to confirm these results.
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