Bigham Heather J, Flaxman Teresa E, Smith Andrew J J, Benoit Daniel L
School of Human Kinetics, University of Ottawa, Canada.
School of Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Ottawa, Canada.
Knee. 2018 Jan;25(1):40-50. doi: 10.1016/j.knee.2017.06.004. Epub 2017 Nov 23.
Females exhibit significantly greater incidence, prevalence, and severity of osteoarthritis (OA) compared to males. Despite known biological, morphological, and functional differences between males and females, there has been little sex-related investigation into sex-specific biomechanical and neuromuscular responses to OA.
To identify sex-related differences in OA-affected adults and within-sex differences between healthy and OA-affected adults' muscular activation patterns during lower limb loading.
Thirty adults with OA and 36 controls completed a standing ground reaction force (GRF) matching protocol requiring participants to expose equal body weight to each leg and modulate horizontal GRFs while maintaining constant joint positions. Electromyography was plotted as a function of GRF direction to depict muscle activation patterns. Muscles were classified as a general joint stabilizer, specific joint stabilizer or moment actuator by quantifying activation patterns with a test of asymmetry, specificity index and mean direction of activity. Lower limb kinematics and kinetics were also recorded.
In general, muscle roles as it relates to joint stability did not differ between groups. Compared to controls, both males and females with OA demonstrated greater rectus femoris activity and reduced knee rotation moments. Females with OA had significantly greater biceps femoris and gastrocnemius activity during respective lateral, and anterior-medial loading directions compared to males with OA.
We identified fundamental differences in muscular stabilization strategies in older adults with OA as well as sex-related changes in neuromuscular function that may influence joint loading conditions and provide insight into the greater incidence of knee OA in females.
与男性相比,女性骨关节炎(OA)的发病率、患病率和严重程度明显更高。尽管已知男性和女性在生物学、形态学和功能上存在差异,但针对OA的性别特异性生物力学和神经肌肉反应的性别相关研究却很少。
确定受OA影响的成年人中与性别相关的差异,以及健康成年人与受OA影响的成年人在下肢负重期间肌肉激活模式的性别内差异。
30名OA患者和36名对照者完成了一项站立地面反作用力(GRF)匹配方案,要求参与者每条腿承受相同体重,并在保持关节位置不变的同时调节水平GRF。将肌电图绘制为GRF方向的函数,以描绘肌肉激活模式。通过不对称性测试、特异性指数和活动平均方向量化激活模式,将肌肉分类为一般关节稳定肌、特定关节稳定肌或力矩促动肌。还记录了下肢的运动学和动力学数据。
总体而言,各组之间与关节稳定性相关的肌肉作用没有差异。与对照组相比,患有OA的男性和女性股直肌活动均增强,膝关节旋转力矩降低。与患有OA的男性相比,患有OA的女性在各自的外侧和前内侧负重方向上股二头肌和腓肠肌的活动明显更强。
我们确定了患有OA的老年人在肌肉稳定策略方面的根本差异,以及神经肌肉功能的性别相关变化,这些变化可能会影响关节负荷情况,并有助于深入了解女性膝关节OA发病率较高的原因。