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PAPER 100: A COMPARISON OF THE KNEE MOMENTS AND MUSCLE ACTIVATION PATTERNS IN MEDIAL VS LATERAL COMPARTMENT KNEE OSTEOARTHRITIS



Abstract

Purpose: The purpose of this study was to determine what differences exist in the knee flexion, rotation and adduction moments and periarticular knee muscle activation patterns between subjects with medial compartment knee osteoarthritis (OA) and those with lateral compartment knee OA.

Method: Forty eight individuals with knee OA were studied. The group was divided into those with predominantly medial compartment involvement (38 subjects, age 63 ± 8 years) and those with lateral involvement (10 subjects, age 63 ± 9 years). Three-dimensional motion (Optotrak) and ground reaction force (AMTI) data were collected while the subjects walked at a self-selected velocity. The knee flexion, rotation and adduction moments, time normalized to the percentage of one gait cycle, were calculated using an inverse dynamics approach. Electromyograms (EMG) were also collected from the rectus femoris, vastus lateralis, vastus medialis, medial and lateral hamstrings, and medial and lateral gastrocnemius and normalized to maximum voluntary isometric contractions. Knee moments and waveforms for each muscle for one complete gait cycle were analyzed for group differences using principal component analysis (PCA) followed by Student’s t-tests (alpha-adj = 0.017) for the PCA scores.

Results: The two groups were statistical similar in terms of age, height, weight, and walking velocity (p> 0.05). PCA analysis revealed statistically significant differences (p< 0.017) in patterns for the knee adduction moment, medial gastrocnemius, and lateral hamstrings between the two groups.

Conclusion: As expected, there was a difference in the knee adduction moment between the two groups. What is novel is that the muscle activation patterns from the lateral site group are consistent with an attempt to unload that compartment. The results of this study provide evidence that biomechanical and neuromuscular differences do exist, depending on the OA site. This could have implications for developing site-specific conservative management approaches

Correspondence should be addressed to Meghan Corbeil, Meetings Coordinator Email: meghan@canorth.org