Knee biomechanics and contralateral knee osteoarthritis progression after total knee arthroplasty

Despite the success rate of Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA), many patients undergo contralateral TKA. It is possible that altered gait mechanics after unilateral TKA play a role in the progression of contralateral OA progression. The purpose of this study was to identify biomechanical predictors of ra...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inGait & posture Vol. 91; pp. 266 - 275
Main Authors Aljehani, Moiyad Saleh, Christensen, Jesse C., Snyder-Mackler, Lynn, Crenshaw, Jeremy, Brown, Allison, Zeni, Joseph A.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Elsevier B.V 01.01.2022
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Summary:Despite the success rate of Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA), many patients undergo contralateral TKA. It is possible that altered gait mechanics after unilateral TKA play a role in the progression of contralateral OA progression. The purpose of this study was to identify biomechanical predictors of radiographic OA progression in the contralateral (non-surgical) knee after unilateral (primary/initial) TKA. In addition, this study quantified for patients who had contralateral OA progression. Biomechanical outcomes were collected 6–24 months after unilateral primary TKA and were used to predict changes in contralateral OA severity at follow-up. Participants were divided into “Progressor” and “Non-Progressor” groups based on changes in Kellgren-Lawrence (KL) OA grade and Joint Space Width (JSW) between baseline and follow-up testing sessions. Biomechanical factors during walking were peak knee adduction moment, knee flexion/extension excursions, knee angle at initial foot contact, and peak knee flexion/extension. Multiple independent t-tests were used to examine the magnitude of differences in biomechanical variables between the groups. Logistic regression was used to examine the association between the biomechanical predictors and change in KL scores and JSW. The mean time between surgery and follow-up x-rays was 8.8 (2.4) years. Of 40 participants, 62.5–78% had contralateral radiographic knee OA progression by follow-up. There were no significant differences in the biomechanical variables between groups. For the regression analysis, none of the biomechanical variables were found to be predictors for contralateral OA progression. Although abnormal biomechanics are known risk factors for primary knee OA, it is possible that the mechanisms that result in OA progression of the contralateral limb are different than primary knee OA progression. Future work should evaluate other objective measures of OA progression and determine if cumulative measures of joint loading are related to OA worsening. •The mean time between surgery and follow-up x-rays was 7.8 years.•The incidence of contralateral knee osteoarthritis (OA) progression was 62.5–78%.•The mechanisms of contralateral OA progression could be different than primary limb.•Altered biomechanics plus clinical factors may increase the risk of developing OA.
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content type line 23
JZ: Study conception, study funding, recruitment and enrollment, data interpretation, writing and editing of manuscript
JC: Data analysis, comprehensive editing of manuscript
MA: Data processing, data analysis, writing and editing of manuscript
Contribution
LSM: Study funding, recruitment and enrollment, data interpretation, comprehensive editing of manuscript
AB: Data analysis, comprehensive editing of manuscript
ISSN:0966-6362
1879-2219
DOI:10.1016/j.gaitpost.2021.10.020