Faculty of Health Sciences, University of Western Ontario, London, N6G 1H1, ON, Canada; Bone and Joint Institute, University of Western Ontario, London Health Sciences Centre-University Hospital, London, N6A 5B5, ON, Canada.
Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry, University of Western Ontario, London, N6A 5C1, ON, Canada; Bone and Joint Institute, University of Western Ontario, London Health Sciences Centre-University Hospital, London, N6A 5B5, ON, Canada.
Osteoarthritis Cartilage. 2022 Jan;30(1):42-51. doi: 10.1016/j.joca.2021.10.013. Epub 2021 Nov 10.
To explore mechanisms of mechanoinflammation, we investigated the association between the presence of knee synovial perivascular edema and gait biomechanics that serve as surrogate measures of knee load in patients with knee osteoarthritis (OA).
Patients with symptomatic, radiographic knee OA and neutral to varus alignment undergoing total knee arthroplasty or high tibial osteotomy participated in this cross-sectional analysis. All participants underwent 3D gait analysis prior to surgery. Synovial biopsies were obtained during surgery for histopathological assessment. The association between the presence of synovial perivascular edema (predictor) and the external knee moment (outcome) in each orthogonal plane was analyzed using multivariate linear regression and polynomial mixed effects regression models, while adjusting for age, sex, BMI, and gait speed.
Ninety-two patients with complete gait and histopathological data were included. When fitted over 100% of stance, regression models indicated substantial differences between patients with and without synovial perivascular edema for knee moments in frontal, sagittal and transverse planes. The knee adduction moment was higher in patients with edema from 16 to 74% of stance, with the largest difference at 33% of stance (β = 6.87 Nm [95%CI 3.02, 10.72]); whereas the knee flexion-extension moment differed from 15 to 92% of stance, with the largest difference in extension at 60% of stance (β = -10.80 Nm [95%CI -16.20, -5.40]).
In patients with knee OA, the presence of synovial perivascular edema identified by histopathology is associated with aberrant patterns of knee loading throughout stance, supporting the link between biomechanics and synovial inflammation.
为了探究机械炎症的机制,我们研究了膝关节滑膜血管周围水肿的存在与膝关节骨关节炎(OA)患者的步态生物力学之间的关系,后者可作为膝关节负荷的替代测量指标。
本横断面分析纳入了患有症状性、放射影像学膝 OA 且下肢对线为中立至内翻的患者,这些患者正在接受全膝关节置换术或胫骨高位截骨术。所有参与者在手术前均进行了 3D 步态分析。在手术过程中采集滑膜活检组织以进行组织病理学评估。使用多元线性回归和多项式混合效应回归模型,分析滑膜血管周围水肿(预测因子)与每个正交平面中外侧膝关节力矩(结果)之间的关系,同时调整年龄、性别、BMI 和步态速度。
共纳入了 92 例具有完整步态和组织病理学数据的患者。当模型拟合 100%的站立期时,回归模型表明,在额状面、矢状面和横断面中,有和无滑膜血管周围水肿的患者之间的膝关节力矩存在显著差异。在站立期的 16%至 74%,水肿患者的膝关节内收力矩更高,其中在站立期的 33%时差异最大(β=6.87 Nm [95%CI 3.02,10.72]);而在站立期的 15%至 92%,膝关节屈伸力矩不同,其中在站立期的 60%时伸展力矩差异最大(β=-10.80 Nm [95%CI -16.20,-5.40])。
在膝关节 OA 患者中,组织病理学上识别出的滑膜血管周围水肿的存在与整个站立期膝关节负荷的异常模式相关,支持生物力学与滑膜炎症之间的联系。