CONTEXT: Very few authors have investigated the relationship between hip-abductor muscle strength and frontal-plane knee mechanics during running. OBJECTIVE: To investigate this relationship using a 3-week hip-abductor muscle-strengthening program to identify changes in strength, pain, and biomechanics in runners with patellofemoral pain syndrome (PFPS). DESIGN: Cohort study. SETTING: University-based clinical research laboratory. PATIENTS OR OTHER PARTICIPANTS: Fifteen individuals (5 men, 10 women) with PFPS and 10 individuals without PFPS (4 men, 6 women) participated. INTERVENTION(S): The patients with PFPS completed a 3-week hip-abductor strengthening protocol; control participants did not. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): The dependent variables of interest were maximal isometric hip-abductor muscle strength, 2-dimensional peak knee genu valgum angle, and stride-to-stride knee-joint variability. All measures were recorded at baseline and 3 weeks later. Between-groups differences were compared using repeated-measures analyses of variance. RESULTS: At baseline, the PFPS group exhibited reduced strength, no difference in peak genu valgum angle, and increased stride-to-stride knee-joint variability compared with the control group. After the 3-week protocol, the PFPS group demonstrated increased strength, less pain, no change in peak genu valgum angle, and reduced stride-to-stride knee-joint variability compared with baseline. CONCLUSIONS: A 3-week hip-abductor muscle-strengthening protocol was effective in increasing muscle strength and decreasing pain and stride-to-stride knee-joint variability in individuals with PFPS. However, concomitant changes in peak knee genu valgum angle were not observed.
CONTEXT: Very few authors have investigated the relationship between hip-abductor muscle strength and frontal-plane knee mechanics during running. OBJECTIVE: To investigate this relationship using a 3-week hip-abductor muscle-strengthening program to identify changes in strength, pain, and biomechanics in runners with patellofemoral pain syndrome (PFPS). DESIGN: Cohort study. SETTING: University-based clinical research laboratory. PATIENTS OR OTHER PARTICIPANTS: Fifteen individuals (5 men, 10 women) with PFPS and 10 individuals without PFPS (4 men, 6 women) participated. INTERVENTION(S): The patients with PFPS completed a 3-week hip-abductor strengthening protocol; control participants did not. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE(S): The dependent variables of interest were maximal isometric hip-abductor muscle strength, 2-dimensional peak knee genu valgum angle, and stride-to-stride knee-joint variability. All measures were recorded at baseline and 3 weeks later. Between-groups differences were compared using repeated-measures analyses of variance. RESULTS: At baseline, the PFPS group exhibited reduced strength, no difference in peak genu valgum angle, and increased stride-to-stride knee-joint variability compared with the control group. After the 3-week protocol, the PFPS group demonstrated increased strength, less pain, no change in peak genu valgum angle, and reduced stride-to-stride knee-joint variability compared with baseline. CONCLUSIONS: A 3-week hip-abductor muscle-strengthening protocol was effective in increasing muscle strength and decreasing pain and stride-to-stride knee-joint variability in individuals with PFPS. However, concomitant changes in peak knee genu valgum angle were not observed.
Authors: Casey A Myers; Peter J Laz; Kevin B Shelburne; Dana L Judd; Joshua D Winters; Jennifer E Stevens-Lapsley; Bradley S Davidson Journal: J Biomech Date: 2019-06-06 Impact factor: 2.712
Authors: Isaac Wouters; Thomas Almonroeder; Bryan Dejarlais; Andrew Laack; John D Willson; Thomas W Kernozek Journal: Int J Sports Phys Ther Date: 2012-12