The influence of pain on tibiofemoral joint contact force and muscle forces in knee osteoarthritis patients during stair ascent

Abstract This study investigated the tibiofemoral joint (TFJ) forces and supporting muscle forces displayed by knee osteoarthritis (OA) patients during stair ascent, and if these forces were influenced by the presence of pain. Fifteen knee OA patients partitioned into two groups based on pain experi...

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Main Authors: Phil D. B. Price, Connor Gissane, Daniel J. Cleather
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2020-09-01
Series:Engineering Reports
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/eng2.12227
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spelling doaj-c8920964168e4218b3571bc594f960852020-11-25T03:27:52ZengWileyEngineering Reports2577-81962020-09-0129n/an/a10.1002/eng2.12227The influence of pain on tibiofemoral joint contact force and muscle forces in knee osteoarthritis patients during stair ascentPhil D. B. Price0Connor Gissane1Daniel J. Cleather2School of Sport, Health and Applied Sciences St Mary's University Twickenham UKSchool of Sport, Health and Applied Sciences St Mary's University Twickenham UKSchool of Sport, Health and Applied Sciences St Mary's University Twickenham UKAbstract This study investigated the tibiofemoral joint (TFJ) forces and supporting muscle forces displayed by knee osteoarthritis (OA) patients during stair ascent, and if these forces were influenced by the presence of pain. Fifteen knee OA patients partitioned into two groups based on pain experienced during stair ascent trails using a Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) (OA‐pain = 10; OA‐no pain = 5) and 14 healthy aged‐matched controls took part in this study. Kinematic and kinetic data were collected during three stair ascent trials, which provided the inputs for the musculoskeletal model FreeBody. TFJ contact forces and muscles forces were predicted by the model at early, mid‐ and late stance. These variables were compared between groups using a one‐way analysis of variance. The results show the OA‐pain (P < .05; d = 2.4) and OA‐no pain (P < .05; d = 1.1) groups displayed reduced medial TFJ contact forces and altered muscle forces in comparison to healthy controls during early stance. This suggests pain and the anticipation of pain results in knee OA patients deliberately offloading the front limb during stair ascent, which alters supporting muscle forces. This study provides valuable information on knee OA mechanics during stair ascent for clinicians developing rehabilitation programs.https://doi.org/10.1002/eng2.12227muscle forcesmusculoskeletal modelosteoarthritisstair ascenttibiofemoral joint forces
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Phil D. B. Price
Connor Gissane
Daniel J. Cleather
spellingShingle Phil D. B. Price
Connor Gissane
Daniel J. Cleather
The influence of pain on tibiofemoral joint contact force and muscle forces in knee osteoarthritis patients during stair ascent
Engineering Reports
muscle forces
musculoskeletal model
osteoarthritis
stair ascent
tibiofemoral joint forces
author_facet Phil D. B. Price
Connor Gissane
Daniel J. Cleather
author_sort Phil D. B. Price
title The influence of pain on tibiofemoral joint contact force and muscle forces in knee osteoarthritis patients during stair ascent
title_short The influence of pain on tibiofemoral joint contact force and muscle forces in knee osteoarthritis patients during stair ascent
title_full The influence of pain on tibiofemoral joint contact force and muscle forces in knee osteoarthritis patients during stair ascent
title_fullStr The influence of pain on tibiofemoral joint contact force and muscle forces in knee osteoarthritis patients during stair ascent
title_full_unstemmed The influence of pain on tibiofemoral joint contact force and muscle forces in knee osteoarthritis patients during stair ascent
title_sort influence of pain on tibiofemoral joint contact force and muscle forces in knee osteoarthritis patients during stair ascent
publisher Wiley
series Engineering Reports
issn 2577-8196
publishDate 2020-09-01
description Abstract This study investigated the tibiofemoral joint (TFJ) forces and supporting muscle forces displayed by knee osteoarthritis (OA) patients during stair ascent, and if these forces were influenced by the presence of pain. Fifteen knee OA patients partitioned into two groups based on pain experienced during stair ascent trails using a Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) (OA‐pain = 10; OA‐no pain = 5) and 14 healthy aged‐matched controls took part in this study. Kinematic and kinetic data were collected during three stair ascent trials, which provided the inputs for the musculoskeletal model FreeBody. TFJ contact forces and muscles forces were predicted by the model at early, mid‐ and late stance. These variables were compared between groups using a one‐way analysis of variance. The results show the OA‐pain (P < .05; d = 2.4) and OA‐no pain (P < .05; d = 1.1) groups displayed reduced medial TFJ contact forces and altered muscle forces in comparison to healthy controls during early stance. This suggests pain and the anticipation of pain results in knee OA patients deliberately offloading the front limb during stair ascent, which alters supporting muscle forces. This study provides valuable information on knee OA mechanics during stair ascent for clinicians developing rehabilitation programs.
topic muscle forces
musculoskeletal model
osteoarthritis
stair ascent
tibiofemoral joint forces
url https://doi.org/10.1002/eng2.12227
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