Literature DB >> 33344015

CONSISTENCY OF DYNAMIC KNEE VALGUS KINEMATICS AND PAIN ACROSS FUNCTIONAL TASKS IN FEMALES WITH PATELLOFEMORAL PAIN: A CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY.

Sara A Scholtes1, Gretchen B Salsich2.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND
PURPOSE: Dynamic knee valgus has been associated with patellofemoral pain (PFP) during high-level tasks, however, repeated lower-level stresses may be an alternative pain mechanism. The primary purpose of the current study was to examine the consistency of dynamic knee valgus and task-elicited pain demonstrated by females with PFP across four common functional tasks (stair ascent, stair descent, sit-to-stand, and stand-to-sit). A secondary purpose was to assess the correlation between the clinical test of single-limb squat and functional tasks. HYPOTHESIS: Females with patellofemoral pain will demonstrate a positive relationship in magnitude of dynamic knee valgus and task-elicited pain across functional tasks. Individuals who demonstrated greater dynamic knee valgus and task-elicited pain during the clinical test of single-limb squat would demonstrate greater dynamic knee valgus and task elicited pain during stair ascent/descent and sit-to-stand/stand-to-sit tasks. STUDY
DESIGN: Cross-sectional study; secondary analysis of a feasibility intervention study.
METHODS: Twenty-three women with patellofemoral pain (age: 21.8 SD 3.7 years; BMI: 22.2 SD 2.0 kg/m2) participated. Three-dimensional kinematic data were captured during task completion. Hip and knee frontal and transverse plane angles at 45 ° of knee flexion, and pain using a visual analog scale, were assessed during single-limb squat, stair ascent/descent, and sit-to-stand. Pearson product-moment correlation coefficients were calculated to examine between-task relationships for each variable at the pre-intervention assessment.
RESULTS: Correlation coefficients between tasks ranged from 0.23-0.76 for hip frontal plane measures (7/10 significant relationships, p<0.02), 0.31-0.90 for hip transverse plane measures (7/10 significant, p<0.01), 0.87-0.95 for knee frontal plane measures (10/10 significant, p<0.01), and 0.54-0.86 for knee transverse plane measures (10/10 significant, p<0.01). Correlations spanned 0.59-0.85 for pain during tasks (10/10 significant, p<0.01).
CONCLUSION: Females with patellofemoral pain demonstrated positive correlations in dynamic knee valgus kinematics and task-elicited pain across five tasks. Movement and pain during the clinical test of single-limb squat test also was correlated with movement and pain during the functional tasks of stair ascent/descent and sit-to-stand. LEVEL OF EVIDENCE: Level 2b.
© 2020 by the Sports Physical Therapy Section.

Entities:  

Keywords:  movement impairments; movement system.; patellofemoral pain; sit-to-stand; stair ascent/descent

Year:  2020        PMID: 33344015      PMCID: PMC7727413          DOI: 10.26603/ijspt20200985

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Int J Sports Phys Ther        ISSN: 2159-2896


  35 in total

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