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- Devender Singh, Woojin Park, Dongwook Hwang, and Martin S Levy.
- Seton Spine and Scoliosis Center, Austin, TX, USA.
- Work. 2015 Jun 5; 51 (2): 337-48.
BackgroundLittle research is available on low back biomechanical stresses that obese and overweight workers experience from manual load lifting.ObjectiveThe study objective was to quantitatively evaluate low back biomechanical stresses of severely obese (BMI≥35 kg/m2) workers during manual lifts of moderate load weights.MethodTwenty severely obese and 20 normal weight participants performed infrequent lifting in 16 task conditions. In each task condition, NIOSH recommended load weights were computed for the origin and destination of lift and were employed as the load weights. Optical motion capture was performed to collect lifting posture data. For each participant and each lifting condition, L5/S1 disc compression forces were computed at the origin and destination of lift using a static low back biomechanical model.ResultsThe L5/S1 disc compression forces estimated for the severely obese participants ranged from 3000N to 8500N and many exceeded the 3400N NIOSH action limit by large margins. Group mean disc compression force was significantly larger for the severely obese than the normal weight group.ConclusionIn light of previous research on spine, bone and obesity, the study results seem to suggest that severely obese individuals are likely at an increased risk of lifting-related low back pain compared with normal weight individuals.
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