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. 2021 Jun 23:123:110538.
doi: 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2021.110538. Epub 2021 May 18.

The effects of knee pain on knee contact force and external knee adduction moment in patients with knee osteoarthritis

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The effects of knee pain on knee contact force and external knee adduction moment in patients with knee osteoarthritis

Momoko Yamagata et al. J Biomech. .
Free article

Abstract

Knee osteoarthritis (OA) is a major cause of knee pain, leading to physical dysfunction. External knee adduction moment (KAM), a surrogate measure of knee contact force (KCF) in the medial compartment, is related to knee pain, but the association between KCF and pain severity remains unclear. This study aimed to reveal the differences in KCF due to pain severity. Twenty-eight patients with knee OA were evaluated knee symptoms including pain severity via the Knee Society Score. Based on the median symptom score, 17 points in this study, subjects were classified as having Mild symptomatic OA (n = 15) and Severe symptomatic OA (n = 13). Subjects walked three times at a comfortable speed along a six-meter walkway, and we calculated KAM during the stance phase. KCF magnitude and distribution were also computed using the subject-specific musculoskeletal model, considering physical characteristics such as the femorotibial angle measured by X-ray. No differences in physical characteristics such as femorotibial angle and gait speed were found by symptom severity, whereas KAM and medial KCF at minimum and second peak in Severe symptomatic OA patients were significantly greater than those in Mild symptomatic OA. A significant medial shift of KCF in Severe symptomatic OA was also seen at first peak and minimum. Severe symptomatic OA had a greater medial KCF and medial shift of KCF. Detailed evaluations of KCF magnitude and distribution in addition to KAM would provide crucial information on knee contact force in relation to symptom severity.

Keywords: Gait; Knee adduction moment; Knee contact force; Knee osteoarthritis; Musculoskeletal model.

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