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BIOMECHANICAL AND CLINICAL FACTORS INVOLVED IN THE PROGRESSION OF KNEE OSTEOARTHRITIS

Background: Knee osteoarthritis is a degenerative disease characterized by damaged joint tissues (e.g., cartilage) that leads to joint pain, and reduced mobility and quality of life. Various factors are involved in disease progression, including biomechanical, patient-reported outcome and mobility measures. This thesis provides important longitudinal data on the role of these factors in disease progression, and the trajectory of biomechanical factors in persons with knee osteoarthritis.
Objectives: (1) Determine the extent to which changes over 2.5 years in knee cartilage thickness and volume in persons with knee osteoarthritis were predicted by the knee adduction and flexion moment peaks, and knee adduction moment impulse and loading frequency. (2) Determine the extent to which changes over 2 years in walking and stair-climbing mobility in women with knee osteoarthritis were predicted by quadriceps strength and power, pain and self-efficacy. (3) Estimate the relative and absolute test-retest reliabilities of biomechanical risk factors for knee osteoarthritis progression.
Methods: Data were collected at 3-month intervals during a longitudinal (3-year), observational study of persons with clinical knee osteoarthritis (n=64). Magnetic resonance imaging of the study knee was acquired at the first and last assessments, and used to determine cartilage thickness and volume. Accelerometry and dynamometry data were acquired every 3 months, and used to determine knee loading frequency and knee muscle strength and power, respectively. Walking and stair-climbing mobility, as well as pain and self-efficacy data, were also collected every 3 months. Gait analyses were performed every 6 months, and used to calculate lower-extremity kinematics and kinetics.
Results: (1) The knee adduction moment peak and impulse each interacted with body mass index to predict loss of medial tibial cartilage volume over 2.5 years. These interactions suggested that larger joint loads in those with a higher body mass index were associated with greater loss of cartilage volume. (2) In women, lower baseline self-efficacy predicted decreased walking and stair ascent performances over 2 years. Higher baseline pain intensity/frequency also predicted decreased walking performance. Quadriceps strength and power each interacted with self-efficacy to predict worsening stair ascent times. These interactions suggested that the impact of lesser quadriceps strength and power on worsening stair ascent performance was more important among women with lower self-efficacy. (3) Relative reliabilities were high for the knee adduction moment peak and impulse, quadriceps strength and power, and body mass index (i.e., intraclass correlation coefficients >0.80). Absolute reliabilities were high for quadriceps strength and body mass index (standard errors of measurement <15% of the mean). Data supported the use of interventions effective in reducing the knee adduction moment and body mass index, and increasing quadriceps strength, in persons with knee osteoarthritis.
Conclusion: Findings from this thesis suggest that biomechanical factors play a modest independent role in the progression of knee osteoarthritis. However, in the presence of other circumstances (e.g., obesity, low self-efficacy, high pain intensity/frequency), biomechanical factors can vastly worsen the disease. Strategies aiming to curb structural progression and improve clinical outcomes in knee osteoarthritis should target biomechanical and clinical outcomes simultaneously. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / Knee osteoarthritis is a multifactorial disease whose progression involves worsening joint structure, symptoms, and mobility. Various factors are linked to the progression of this disease, including biomechanical, patient-reported outcome and mobility measures. This thesis provides important information on how these factors, separately and collectively, are involved in worsening disease over time, as well as benchmarks that are useful to clinicians and researchers in interpreting results from interventional or longitudinal research. First, we examined how different elements of knee loading were associated with changes in knee cartilage quantity over time in persons with knee osteoarthritis. Second, we examined how different elements of knee muscle capacity and patient-reported outcomes were related to changes in mobility over time in persons with knee osteoarthritis. Third, we examined the stability over time of various biomechanical risk factors for the progression of knee osteoarthritis. Novel results from this thesis showed that: (1) larger knee loads predicted cartilage loss over 2.5 years in obese individuals with knee osteoarthritis but not in persons of normal weight or overweight; (2) among women with knee osteoarthritis with lower self-efficacy (or confidence), lesser knee muscle capacity (strength, power) was an important predictor of declining stair-climbing performance over 2 years; and (3) clinical interventions that can positively alter knee biomechanics include weight loss, knee muscle strengthening, as well as specific knee surgery and alterations during walking to reduce knee loads. Interventions for knee osteoarthritis should target biomechanical and clinical outcomes simultaneously.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/22037
Date January 2017
CreatorsBrisson, Nicholas
ContributorsMaly, Monica, Rehabilitation Science
Source SetsMcMaster University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis

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