Koralewicz L M, Engh G A
Anderson Orthopaedic Research Center, Alexandria, Virginia 22307, USA.
J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2000 Nov;82(11):1582-8. doi: 10.2106/00004623-200011000-00011.
Proprioception--one's ability to sense joint position and joint motion--is affected by factors such as age, muscle fatigue, and osteoarthritis. Most proprioception studies have focused on young active subjects or on recipients of total knee replacements. Few have involved a population with arthritic knees prior to total knee replacement or persons similar in age to patients with advanced knee arthritis who are to have total knee arthroplasty. The purpose of the present study was to determine (1) if proprioception in arthritic knees differs from proprioception in nonarthritic, age-matched, normal knees; (2) if, when proprioception in one knee is reduced by the presence of advanced gonarthrosis, it also is reduced in the contralateral knee irrespective of the presence of arthritis; and (3) if a person's grade of arthritis is associated with his or her level of proprioception.
This study compared the proprioception levels of a group of 117 patients who were scheduled for total knee arthroplasty because of severe arthritis (mean age, 67.9 years) with those of a control group of forty patients who were recruited from a hospital-based cardiac rehabilitation program and did not have knee arthritis (mean age, 68.3 years). We used a customized Biodex System 2 Multi-Joint Testing and Rehabilitation System to compare proprioception (the threshold to detection of passive motion) between the two groups.
Middle-aged and elderly persons with advanced knee arthritis were significantly less able to detect passive motion of the knee than were middle-aged and elderly persons without knee arthritis. Patients who had arthritis in only one knee had a reduced ability to detect passive motion of both knees. There was no significant association between the radiographic severity of arthritis and the threshold to detection of passive motion in patients with advanced knee arthritis.
Knee proprioception in middle-aged and elderly persons with advanced knee arthritis is reduced in comparison with that in middle-aged and elderly persons without arthritis. Such loss of proprioception is independent of the severity of knee arthritis and may foretell the development of arthritis. When a patient has reduced proprioception with regard to one knee affected by arthritis, he or she also has reduced proprioception with regard to the contralateral knee, independent of the presence or severity of degenerative arthritis. When an investigator is evaluating changes in proprioception after knee arthroplasty, it is best to compare the knee with the patient's untreated knee rather than with age-matched controls.
本体感觉——个体感知关节位置和关节运动的能力——会受到年龄、肌肉疲劳和骨关节炎等因素的影响。大多数本体感觉研究都集中在年轻的活跃受试者或全膝关节置换术的接受者身上。很少有研究涉及全膝关节置换术前患有关节炎的膝关节人群,或与即将接受全膝关节置换术的晚期膝关节炎患者年龄相仿的人群。本研究的目的是确定:(1)患有关节炎的膝关节的本体感觉与非关节炎、年龄匹配的正常膝关节的本体感觉是否不同;(2)当一侧膝关节因晚期膝关节炎而本体感觉降低时,对侧膝关节的本体感觉是否也会降低,而不论是否存在关节炎;(3)一个人的关节炎分级是否与其本体感觉水平相关。
本研究比较了一组117例因严重关节炎计划接受全膝关节置换术的患者(平均年龄67.9岁)与一组从医院心脏康复项目招募的40例无膝关节炎的对照患者(平均年龄68.3岁)的本体感觉水平。我们使用定制的Biodex System 2多关节测试与康复系统来比较两组之间的本体感觉(被动运动检测阈值)。
患有晚期膝关节炎的中老年人比没有膝关节炎的中老年人明显更难检测到膝关节的被动运动。仅一侧膝关节患有关节炎的患者检测双侧膝关节被动运动的能力降低。在患有晚期膝关节炎的患者中,关节炎的影像学严重程度与被动运动检测阈值之间没有显著关联。
与没有关节炎的中老年人相比,患有晚期膝关节炎的中老年人的膝关节本体感觉降低。这种本体感觉的丧失与膝关节炎的严重程度无关,可能预示着关节炎的发展。当患者患有关节炎的一侧膝关节本体感觉降低时,其对侧膝关节的本体感觉也会降低,与退行性关节炎的存在或严重程度无关。当研究人员评估膝关节置换术后本体感觉的变化时,最好将患者的手术膝关节与未治疗的膝关节进行比较,而不是与年龄匹配的对照组进行比较。