Effect of walking with a modified gait on activation patterns of the knee spanning muscles in people with medial knee osteoarthritis

Journal Article (2020)
Authors

M. J. Booij (Amsterdam UMC)

R. Richards (Amsterdam UMC)

J. Harlaar (TU Delft - Biomechatronics & Human-Machine Control, Amsterdam UMC)

Josien C. van den Noort (Amsterdam UMC)

Research Group
Biomechatronics & Human-Machine Control
Copyright
© 2020 M. J. Booij, R. Richards, J. Harlaar, J. C. van den Noort
To reference this document use:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.knee.2019.10.006
More Info
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Publication Year
2020
Language
English
Copyright
© 2020 M. J. Booij, R. Richards, J. Harlaar, J. C. van den Noort
Research Group
Biomechatronics & Human-Machine Control
Issue number
1
Volume number
27
Pages (from-to)
198-206
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.knee.2019.10.006
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Abstract

Objective: To evaluate muscle activation patterns and co-contraction around the knee in response to walking with modified gait patterns in patients with medial compartment knee-osteoarthritis (KOA). Design: 40 medial KOA patients walked on an instrumented treadmill. Surface EMG activity from seven knee-spanning muscles (gastrocnemius, hamstrings, quadriceps), kinematics, and ground reaction forces were recorded. Patients received real-time visual feedback on target kinematics to modify their gait pattern towards three different gait modifications: Toe-in, Wider steps, Medial Thrust. The individualized feedback aimed to reduce their first peak knee adduction moment (KAM) by ≥ 10%. Changes in muscle activations and medial/lateral co-contraction index during the loading response phase (10–35% of the gait cycle) were evaluated, for the steps in which ≥ 10% KAM reduction was achieved. Results: Data from 30 patients were included in the analyses; i.e. all who could successfully reduce their KAM in a sufficient number of steps by ≥ 10%. When walking with ≥ 10% KAM reduction, Medial Thrust gait (KAM − 31%) showed increased flexor activation (24%), co-contraction (17%) and knee flexion moment (35%). Isolated wider-step gait also reduced the KAM (− 26%), but to a smaller extent, but without increasing muscle activation amplitudes and co-contraction. Toe-in gait showed the greatest reduction in the KAM (− 35%), but was accompanied by an increased flexor activation of 42% and hence an increased co-contraction index. Conclusion: Gait modifications that are most effective in reducing the KAM also yield an increase in co-contraction, thereby compromising at least part of the effects on net knee load.

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