Lee Hyunwook, Buck Ashley N, Armitano-Lago Cortney, Creighton Robert A, Kamath Ganesh M, Spang Jeffrey T, Li Xiaojuan, Lalush David, Franz Jason R, Blackburn J Troy, Pietrosimone Brian
Department of Sport, Health, and Rehabilitation, Kookmin University, Seoul, South Korea.
Department of Exercise and Sport Science, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
J Orthop Res. 2025 Aug;43(8):1413-1422. doi: 10.1002/jor.26099. Epub 2025 May 19.
A history of anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) and high body mass index (BMI) are strong risk factors for incident knee osteoarthritis. Limited research has evaluated the interaction between ACLR and high BMI on limb-level loading and early deleterious changes in cartilage health. The purpose of this study was to separately investigate the association between vertical ground reaction force (vGRF) loading profiles during gait and tibiofemoral cartilage composition in ACLR patients with high and normal BMI. Forty-three participants with primary unilateral ACLR (17 ± 14 months post-ACLR) were categorized as high (≥ 25 kg/m; n = 18) or normal (< 25 kg/m; n = 25) BMI and performed an overground gait at self-selected speed. For biomechanical outcomes, we calculated the differences between first peak and midstance minimum (∆vGRF1) and between the second peak and midstance minimum (∆vGRF2). T1ρ relaxation time interlimb ratios (ILR), calculated as the T1ρ relaxation time in the ACLR relative to the uninjured limb, were calculated for the medial and lateral tibia and femur. Stepwise linear regressions were used to determine associations between biomechanical outcomes and T1ρ relaxation time ILR for each region of interest. Lesser ∆vGRF1 and ∆vGRF2 in the high-BMI group significantly associated with greater T1ρ relaxation time ILR for the medial femoral condyle (ΔR = 0.28, p = 0.03; ΔR = 0.25, p = 0.04, respectively) and tibial plateau (ΔR = 0.55, p < 0.001; ΔR = 0.25, p = 0.004, respectively). Aberrant limb-level loading, characterized by less dynamic limb loading, is linked to deleterious changes in tibiofemoral cartilage in ACLR patients with high BMI, suggesting that gait retraining may be more critical for ACLR with a BMI ≥ 25 kg/m.
前交叉韧带重建术(ACLR)病史和高体重指数(BMI)是发生膝关节骨关节炎的强烈危险因素。有限的研究评估了ACLR与高BMI之间对肢体水平负荷和软骨健康早期有害变化的相互作用。本研究的目的是分别调查高BMI和正常BMI的ACLR患者在步态期间垂直地面反作用力(vGRF)负荷曲线与胫股软骨成分之间的关联。43例原发性单侧ACLR患者(ACLR后17±14个月)被分为高BMI(≥25kg/m²;n = 18)或正常BMI(<25kg/m²;n = 25)组,并以自选速度进行地面步态测试。对于生物力学结果,我们计算了第一个峰值与步幅中点最小值之间的差异(∆vGRF1)以及第二个峰值与步幅中点最小值之间的差异(∆vGRF2)。计算内侧和外侧胫骨及股骨的T1ρ弛豫时间肢体间比率(ILR),计算方法为ACLR侧相对于未受伤肢体的T1ρ弛豫时间。采用逐步线性回归来确定感兴趣的每个区域生物力学结果与T1ρ弛豫时间ILR之间的关联。高BMI组中较小的∆vGRF1和∆vGRF2与内侧股骨髁(分别为ΔR = 0.28,p = 0.03;ΔR = 0.25,p = 0.04)和胫骨平台(分别为ΔR = 0.55,p < 0.001;ΔR = 0.25,p = 0.004)更大的T1ρ弛豫时间ILR显著相关。以动态肢体负荷较小为特征的异常肢体水平负荷与高BMI的ACLR患者胫股软骨的有害变化有关,这表明对于BMI≥25kg/m²的ACLR患者,步态再训练可能更为关键。