Department of Exercise and Sport Science, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Fetzer Hall, 210 South Rd, Chapel Hill, NC, 27514, USA.
Department of Exercise and Sport Science, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, CB# 8700, 209 Fetzer Hall, Chapel Hill, NC, 27599, USA.
Knee Surg Sports Traumatol Arthrosc. 2018 May;26(5):1326-1334. doi: 10.1007/s00167-017-4663-y. Epub 2017 Aug 28.
Individuals with an anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) are susceptible to persistent disability, weight gain and the development of knee osteoarthritis. It remains unclear whether body mass index (BMI) is a factor that influences disability following ACLR. The purpose of this study was to determine the association between BMI and self-reported disability [International Knee Documentation Committee (IKDC) Index] in individuals with a unilateral ACLR. We hypothesized that lower BMI would associate with higher IKDC.
BMI and IKDC were measured in 668 individuals with a unilateral ACLR (60.9% female, BMI 24.4 ± 3.7 kg/m, IKDC 84.7 ± 11.9%). Bivariate associations were conducted between BMI and IKDC for the entire sample and selected subsets (gender, ACLR graft type and history of meniscal injury). Multiple regression analyses were used to determine the impact of potential covariates (Tegner score, age and months since ACLR) for significant bivariate associations. After accounting for covariates, there were no significant associations between BMI and IKDC when separately evaluating the cohort based on either gender or history of a concomitant meniscal injury. The odds of achieving age- and gender-matched healthy population average IKDC scores for those with low (<25) and high (≥25) BMI were determined.
Lower BMI associated with higher IKDC (r = -0.08, P = 0.04). For the entire sample, BMI did not uniquely predict variance in IKDC (ΔR > 0.001, n.s.) after accounting for covariates. BMI uniquely predicted a significant but negligible amount of variance in IKDC in individuals with a patellar tendon autograft (ΔR = 0.015, n.s.). Individuals with low BMI demonstrated higher odds (odds ratio = 1.45; 1.05-1.99) of achieving population average IKDC scores compared to participants with high BMI.
There was a significant but negligible correlation between lower BMI and lesser disability in individuals with unilateral ACLR and individuals who are underweight or of normal BMI demonstrated higher odds of achieving population average IKDC scores compared to overweight or obese individuals. While an overall association was found between lower BMI and lesser disability, the magnitude of the association remains negligible; therefore, BMI was not a strong clinical predictor of successful ACLR outcomes in this cohort of patients with unilateral ACLR.
Cross-sectional prognostic study, Level II.
前交叉韧带重建(ACLR)患者易发生持续性残疾、体重增加和膝关节骨关节炎。目前尚不清楚体重指数(BMI)是否是影响 ACLR 后残疾的因素。本研究的目的是确定 BMI 与单侧 ACLR 患者的自我报告残疾(国际膝关节文献委员会(IKDC)指数)之间的关联。我们假设较低的 BMI 与较高的 IKDC 相关。
对 668 名单侧 ACLR 患者(60.9%为女性,BMI 为 24.4±3.7kg/m,IKDC 为 84.7±11.9%)进行 BMI 和 IKDC 测量。对整个样本和选定亚组(性别、ACL 移植物类型和半月板损伤史)进行 BMI 和 IKDC 之间的双变量关联。使用多元回归分析确定潜在协变量(Tegner 评分、年龄和 ACLR 后时间)对显著双变量关联的影响。在考虑协变量后,当分别根据性别或同时伴有半月板损伤的病史评估队列时,BMI 与 IKDC 之间没有显著关联。确定 BMI 较低(<25)和较高(≥25)的个体达到年龄和性别匹配的健康人群平均 IKDC 评分的可能性。
较低的 BMI 与较高的 IKDC 相关(r=-0.08,P=0.04)。对于整个样本,在考虑协变量后,BMI 不能单独预测 IKDC 的方差变化(ΔR>0.001,n.s.)。BMI 可单独预测髌腱自体移植物个体的 IKDC 发生显著但可忽略的变化(ΔR=0.015,n.s.)。与 BMI 较高的参与者相比,BMI 较低的个体达到人群平均 IKDC 评分的可能性更高(优势比=1.45;1.05-1.99)。
在单侧 ACLR 患者中,较低的 BMI 与较轻的残疾之间存在显著但可忽略的相关性,体重不足或正常 BMI 的个体与超重或肥胖个体相比,达到人群平均 IKDC 评分的可能性更高。虽然在该队列中发现了 BMI 与较轻残疾之间的总体关联,但关联的幅度仍然可以忽略不计;因此,BMI 并不是 ACLR 患者的体重指数对 ACLR 结果的预测因素。
横断面预后研究,Ⅱ级。