Is knee joint proprioception worse in the arthritic knee versus the unaffected knee in unilateral knee osteoarthritis?
β Scribed by Leena Sharma; Yi-Chung Pai; Kelly Holtkamp; W. Zev Rymer
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 854 KB
- Volume
- 40
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0004-3591
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
Objective. Neuromuscular joint protection requires proprioceptive input and motor output. Impairment of proprioception in knee osteoarthritis (OA) may contribute to, and/or result from, the disease. If this impairment was exclusively a local result of OA, a between-knee difference would be expected in patients with unilateral OA (UOA). To explore causal directions, 2 hypotheses were tested 1) proprioception is worse in UOA patients versus elderly controls; 2) proprioception is worse in the arthritic knee versus the unaffected knee in UOA patients.
Methods. Twenty-eight UOA patients (Kellgren-Lawrence grade 2 2 in 1 knee and <2 in the other knee) and 29 elderly controls were enrolled. The unaffected knee of each UOA patient and both knees of the elderly controls were required to meet symptom, examination, and radiographic criteria. Proprioception (detection threshold of joint displacement after slow, passive, automated knee motion), body mass index, pain, functional status, range of motion, and laxity were measured.
Results. UOA patients had worse proprioception than did elderly controls, in either knee. A between-knee difference was not found in UOA patients.
Conclusion. Impaired proprioception is not exclusively a local result of disease in knee OA. The relative Dr.
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## Abstract Although treatments for osteoarthritis of the knee are often directed at relieving pain, pain may cause patients to alter how they perform activities to decrease the loads on the joints. The kneeβadduction moment is a major determinant of the load distribution between the medial and lat