Gait Can Determine Source of Knee OA

Article

How your knee moves may be a telling point in a knee osteoarthritis diagnosis, a study shows.

A small study published in the journal Arthritis Care & Research shows that patients with post-traumatic knee osteoarthritis have a decreased adduction as compared to patients with non-traumatic knee osteoarthritis.

The study appears in the September issue of the journal.

While knee osteoarthritis (OA) affects 16% of adults who are 45 years and older, knee OA is different for patients whose injury is as a result of trauma, as compared to those who report having no injury to the knee. The two sources of injury are biologically and radiographically different. Non-traumatic knee OA is marked by joint space narrowing and osteophytes predominantly in the medial compartment.

In post-traumatic knee OA, changes within the medial and lateral compartments of the joint tend to be evenly distributed. These changes include increased meniscal derangement and bone marrow lesion in the lateral knee compartment. In addition, post-traumatic knee OA is associated with decreased synovial fluid and an increased synovial fluid antioxidant enzyme.

The new study shows that frontal plane knee kinematics and kinetics are expressed differently during walking tests for these two groups of patients - who suffered from medial compartment knee OA.

“These differences in gait biomechanics should be considered when investigating biomechanical risk factors and intervention strategies,” wrote the study’s authors who were led by Shawn M. Robbins, Ph.D., of McGill University, Montreal.

The study included 122 patients with non-traumatic knee OA and 93 post-traumatic knee OA. The non-traumatic OA group had higher adduction angles and moments. This group was a significant predictor of peak knee adduction angles (P = 0.04) and moments (P = 0.05), even after controlling for age, speed and disease severity. Similarly, it was a significant predictor for some knee adduction angle (P = 0.02 to 0.64) and moment (P = 0.02 to 0.25) PC scores.

The study’s authors noted some limitations, including having few women (25%) in the study, not controlling for pain medication and the post-traumatic knee OA classification included patients with concomitant injuries or a history of reconstructive surgery.

“Although longitudinal studies are required, these findings are consistent with the suggestion that both static and dynamic alignment contribute to the development of medial knee OA differently in these subgroups, and they may benefit from different biomechanical intervention strategies,” the authors wrote.

 

Significance and Innovations

-  Non-traumatic versus posttraumatic knee osteoarthritis (OA) type accounts for variations in knee adduction angles and moments during gait.

-  Non-traumatic medial knee OA is associated with increased knee adduction angles and external moments during gait.

-  Non-traumatic medial knee OA is associated with more varus alignment, which accounts for most of the differences in gait.

-  These differences in gait biomechanics should be considered when investigating biomechanical risk factors and intervention strategies.

Source:  Arthritis Care & Research

 

References:

Shawn M. Robbins, Trevor B. Birmingham, et al.

"Comparison of Gait Characteristics Between Patients With Nontraumatic and Posttraumatic Medial Knee Osteoarthritis."

First published: 27 July 2016. DOI: 10.1002/acr.22822  

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