Erhart-Hledik Jennifer C, Favre Julien, Andriacchi Thomas P
Veterans Affairs Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, CA, United States; Department of Mechanical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States; Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Stanford University Medical Center, Stanford, CA, United States.
Department of Mechanical Engineering, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States; Department of Musculoskeletal Medicine, Centre Hospitalier Universitaire Vaudois and University of Lausanne, Lausanne, Switzerland.
J Biomech. 2015 Nov 5;48(14):3868-75. doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2015.09.033. Epub 2015 Oct 8.
To test if the relationship between knee kinetics during walking and regional patterns of cartilage thickness is influenced by disease severity we tested the following hypotheses in a cross-sectional study of medial compartment osteoarthritis (OA) subjects: (1) the peak knee flexion (KFM) and adduction moments (KAM) during walking are associated with regional cartilage thickness and medial-to-lateral cartilage thickness ratios, and (2) the associations between knee moments and cartilage thickness data are dependent on disease severity. Seventy individuals with medial compartment knee OA were studied. Gait analysis was used to determine the knee moments and cartilage thickness was measured from magnetic resonance imaging. Multiple linear regression analyses tested for associations between cartilage thickness and knee kinetics. Medial cartilage thickness and medial-to-lateral cartilage thickness ratios were lower in subjects with greater KAM for specific regions of the femoral condyle and tibial plateau with no associations for KFM in patients of all disease severities. When separated by severity, the association between KAM and cartilage thickness was found only in patients with more severe OA, and KFM was significantly associated with cartilage thickness only for the less severe OA subjects for specific tibial plateau regions. The results support the idea that the KAM is larger in patients with more severe disease and the KFM has greater influence early in the disease process, which may lessen as pain increases with disease severity. Each component influences different regions of cartilage. Thus the relative contributions of both KAM and KFM should be considered when evaluating gait mechanics and the influence of any intervention for knee OA.
为了检验步行过程中膝关节动力学与软骨厚度区域模式之间的关系是否受疾病严重程度的影响,我们在一项针对内侧间室骨关节炎(OA)患者的横断面研究中检验了以下假设:(1)步行过程中的膝关节最大屈曲(KFM)和内收力矩(KAM)与区域软骨厚度及内侧至外侧软骨厚度比值相关,(2)膝关节力矩与软骨厚度数据之间的关联取决于疾病严重程度。我们研究了70名内侧间室膝关节OA患者。采用步态分析来确定膝关节力矩,并通过磁共振成像测量软骨厚度。运用多元线性回归分析来检验软骨厚度与膝关节动力学之间的关联。在所有疾病严重程度的患者中,对于股骨髁和胫骨平台的特定区域,KAM较大的患者其内侧软骨厚度及内侧至外侧软骨厚度比值较低,而KFM与之无关联。按严重程度分组后,仅在病情较重的OA患者中发现KAM与软骨厚度之间存在关联,并且仅在病情较轻的OA患者中,特定胫骨平台区域的KFM与软骨厚度显著相关。结果支持以下观点:病情较重的患者KAM更大,而KFM在疾病早期影响更大,随着疼痛随疾病严重程度增加,这种影响可能会减弱。每个因素影响软骨的不同区域。因此,在评估步态力学以及任何针对膝关节OA的干预措施的影响时,应同时考虑KAM和KFM的相对作用。