Sherman David A, Neogi Tuhina, Hornsby Samantha, Felson David, Lavalley Michaell, Stefanik Joshua J
Bouvé College of Health Sciences, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts.
Chobanian & Avedisian School of Medicine, Boston University, Boston, Massachusetts.
ACR Open Rheumatol. 2025 Jul;7(7):e70067. doi: 10.1002/acr2.70067.
Quadriceps weakness increases the risk of knee osteoarthritis (OA) and functional decline. Understanding how quadriceps strength changes over time is crucial for managing knee OA. Knee pain and effusion may influence strength over time through inhibition of motor pathways, but this remains a critical knowledge gap. We aimed to determine quadriceps strength trajectories and the association of knee pain and effusion among individuals with or at risk of knee OA.
We used baseline, two-year, and four-year quadriceps strength data from the Osteoarthritis Initiative to identify quadriceps strength trajectory groups using discrete mixture model clustering. Pain and effusion were assessed at baseline. We determined the relation of pain and effusion to trajectory groups using multinomial logistic regression, adjusted for demographics and radiographic OA.
From 2,527 participants, three strength trajectories were identified for both sexes ("weak," "average," and "strong"), all with a linear decline in strength over four years. In women, individuals with frequent knee pain had higher odds of being in the weakest trajectory group compared to the average (odds ratio [OR] 0.54 [95% confidence interval (CI) 0.43-0.68]) and strong trajectories (OR 0.46 [95% CI 0.32-0.65]). Worse pain severity increased the odds of weakest trajectory group compared to the average (OR 0.89 [95% CI 0.85-0.93]) and strong strength trajectories (OR 0.86 [95% CI 0.80-0.92]). Effusion showed no association. Similar effects were present in men.
Frequent knee pain and knee pain severity were associated with being in a lower quadriceps strength trajectory group, but the rate of strength decline over four years was similar across all groups, suggesting that pain may not influence the rate of decline.
股四头肌无力会增加膝关节骨关节炎(OA)和功能衰退的风险。了解股四头肌力量随时间的变化对于膝关节OA的管理至关重要。膝关节疼痛和积液可能会通过抑制运动通路随时间影响力量,但这仍是一个关键的知识空白。我们旨在确定膝关节OA患者或有膝关节OA风险的个体的股四头肌力量轨迹以及膝关节疼痛和积液之间的关联。
我们使用骨关节炎倡议组织的基线、两年和四年的股四头肌力量数据,通过离散混合模型聚类来识别股四头肌力量轨迹组。在基线时评估疼痛和积液情况。我们使用多项逻辑回归确定疼痛和积液与轨迹组之间的关系,并对人口统计学和放射学OA进行了调整。
在2527名参与者中,男女均确定了三种力量轨迹(“弱”、“平均”和“强”),所有轨迹在四年内力量均呈线性下降。在女性中,与平均轨迹组(优势比[OR]0.54[95%置信区间(CI)0.43 - 0.68])和强轨迹组(OR 0.46[95%CI 0.32 - 0.65])相比,经常膝关节疼痛的个体处于最弱轨迹组的几率更高。与平均轨迹组(OR 0.89[95%CI 0.85 - 0.93])和强力量轨迹组(OR 0.86[95%CI 0.80 - 0.92])相比,更严重的疼痛程度增加了处于最弱轨迹组的几率。积液未显示出关联。男性中也存在类似的效应。
频繁的膝关节疼痛和膝关节疼痛严重程度与处于较低的股四头肌力量轨迹组相关,但四年内所有组的力量下降速率相似,这表明疼痛可能不会影响下降速率。