| Literature DB >> 33450729 |
Jereme B Outerleys1, Michael J Dunbar1, Glen Richardson1, Cheryl L Hubley-Kozey1, Janie L Astephen Wilson1,2.
Abstract
Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) surgery improves knee joint kinematics and kinetics during gait for most patients, but a lack of evidence exists for the level and incidence of improvement that is achieved. The objective of this study was to quantify patient-specific improvements in knee biomechanics relative to osteoarthritis (OA) severity levels. Seventy-two patients underwent 3-dimensional (3D) gait analysis before and 1 year after TKA surgery, as well as 72 asymptomatic adults and 72 with moderate knee OA. A combination of principal component analysis and discriminant analyses were used to categorize knee joint biomechanics for patients before and after surgery relative to asymptomatic, moderate, and severe OA. Post-TKA, 63% were categorized with knee biomechanics consistent with moderate OA, 29% with severe OA, and 8% asymptomatic. The magnitude and pattern of the knee adduction moment and angle (frontal plane features) were the most significant contributors in discriminating between pre-TKA and post-TKA knee biomechanics. Standard of care TKA improves knee biomechanics during gait to levels most consistent with moderate knee OA and predominately targets frontal plane features. These results provide evidence for the level of improvement in knee biomechanics that can be expected following surgery and highlight the biomechanics most targeted by surgery.Entities:
Keywords: function; human movement; knee replacement; multivariate
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33450729 DOI: 10.1123/jab.2020-0051
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Biomech ISSN: 1065-8483 Impact factor: 1.833