Research and Development, Aesculap AG, Tuttlingen, Germany.
Department of Orthopaedic and Trauma Surgery, Musculoskeletal University Center Munich (MUM), Campus Grosshadern, Ludwig Maximilians University Munich, Munich, Germany.
Sci Rep. 2024 Oct 25;14(1):25345. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-76275-3.
Kinematic analysis is a central component of movement biomechanics, describing the relative motion of joint segments during different activities, in different subject cohorts, and at different timepoints. Establishing whether two sets of kinematic signals represent fundamentally similar or different underlying motion patterns is especially challenging, given 1) the lack of consensus around reference frame and joint axis definition, and 2) the substantial effect that minimal variations in frame position and orientation are known to have on signal magnitude and characteristics. As such, enormous variability in the reporting of tibiofemoral kinematics has resulted in joint movement patterns that remain controversially discussed. Previously, we demonstrated the ability of the REference FRame Alignment MEthod (REFRAME) to reorientate and reposition differently aligned local segment frames to achieve convergence in signals representing the same underlying motion, thereby offering a novel approach to consistently report joint motion. In this study, for the first time, we apply REFRAME to assess the rotational and translational in vivo tibiofemoral motion of ten healthy subjects during stair descent based on kinematic signals collected using a moving videofluoroscope. Kinematics were analysed before and after different REFRAME implementations, revealing generally neutral ab/adduction behaviour, accompanied by varying degrees of a sinusoidal int/external tibial rotation pattern over the activity cycle. Our data demonstrate that different selected implementations of REFRAME are able to highlight different characteristics of the motion patterns: Minimisation of the translational root-mean-square revealed proximodistal translation patterns with overall neutral progression, while anteroposterior translation showed seemingly different levels of correlation with flexion/extension in different subjects. On the other hand, REFRAME minimisation of translational variances exposed differences in the relative mean displacement between the femoral and tibial origins between subjects, highlighting differences in mean centre of rotation positions. This early application of REFRAME for providing an understanding of tibiofemoral kinematics demonstrates the potential of this novel approach to bring clarity to an otherwise complex representation of highly variable time-series signals, while highlighting the philosophical challenges of clinically interpretating kinematic signals in the first place.
运动学分析是运动生物力学的一个核心组成部分,用于描述在不同活动、不同受试人群和不同时间点关节段的相对运动。鉴于以下两点,确定两组运动学信号是否代表基本相似或不同的潜在运动模式尤其具有挑战性:1)参考系和关节轴定义缺乏共识,2)框架位置和方向的微小变化对信号幅度和特征有实质性影响。因此,由于胫骨股骨运动学的报告存在巨大差异,导致关节运动模式仍存在争议。之前,我们已经证明了参考系框架对齐方法(REFRAME)重新定向和重新定位不同对齐的局部段框架的能力,以实现代表相同潜在运动的信号的收敛,从而提供了一种一致报告关节运动的新方法。在这项研究中,我们首次应用 REFRAME 来评估 10 名健康受试者在使用移动透视荧光镜采集运动学信号的情况下,在进行下楼梯活动时的胫骨股骨体内旋转和平移运动。在不同 REFRAME 实施前后分析运动学,结果显示通常为中立的外展/内收行为,伴随着在活动周期内胫骨内旋/外旋的正弦波变化。我们的数据表明,REFRAME 的不同选择实施能够突出运动模式的不同特征:均方根平移的最小化揭示了整体中立进展的远近端平移模式,而前后平移显示在不同受试者中与屈伸的相关性似乎不同。另一方面,REFRAME 平移方差的最小化暴露了受试者之间股骨和胫骨起点之间相对平均位移的差异,突出了平均旋转中心位置的差异。REFRAME 对胫骨股骨运动学的早期应用展示了这种新方法的潜力,可以清晰地呈现高度可变时间序列信号的复杂表示,同时突出了从一开始就临床解释运动学信号的哲学挑战。