Whether Patients with Anterior Cruciate Ligament Reconstruction Walking at a Fast Speed Show more Kinematic Asymmetries?

Author:

Lai Huahao1,Chen Xiaoling2,Huang Wenhan1,Xie Zhenyan1,Yan Yuan3,Kang Ming3,Zhang Yu1ORCID,Huang Jiehua3,Zeng Xiaolong4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Bone Oncology Guangdong Provincial People's Hospital (Guangdong Academy of Medical Sciences), Southern Medical University Guangzhou China

2. Department of Rehabilitation Medicine Huizhou Central People's Hospital Huizhou China

3. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery Huizhou Central People's Hospital Huizhou China

4. Department of Orthopaedics Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Chinese Medicine, The Second Affiliated Hospital of Guangzhou University of Chinese Medicine Guangzhou China

Abstract

ObjectiveKnee kinematic asymmetries after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR) are correlated with poor clinical outcomes, such as the progression of knee cartilage degenerations or reinjuries. Fast walking in patients with knee conditions may exacerbate knee kinematic asymmetries, but its impact on ACLR patients is uncertain. The aim of this study is to investigate if fast walking induces more knee kinematic asymmetries in unilateral ACLR patients.MethodsThis cross‐sectional study enrolled 55 patients with unilateral ACLR from January 2020 to July 2022. There were 48 males and seven females with an average age of 30.6 ± 6.4 years. Knee kinematic data were collected at three walking speeds: self‐selected, fast (150% normal), and slow (50% normal). A 3D knee kinematic analysis system measured the data, and self‐reported outcomes assessed comfort levels during walking. We used SPM1D for two‐way repeated ANOVA and posthoc paired t‐tests to analyze kinematic differences in groups.ResultsIn fast walking, ACLR knees exhibited more transverse kinematic asymmetries than intact knees, including greater external rotation angle (1.8°, 38%–43%; gait cycle [GC], p < 0.05 & 1.8–2.7°, 50%–61% GC, p < 0.05) and increased proximal tibial translation (2.1–2.5 mm, 2%–6% GC, p < 0.05 & 2.5–3.2 mm, 92%–96% GC, p < 0.05). Additionally, ACLR knees showed greater posterior tibial translation than intact knees (3.6–3.7 mm, 7%–8% GC, p < 0.05) during fast walking. No posterior tibial translation asymmetries were observed in slow walking compared to normal walking levels. ACLR knees have the most comfortable feelings in slow walking speed, and the most uncomfortable feelings in fast walking speed levels (29%).ConclusionsFast walking induces additional external tibial rotation and proximal and posterior tibial translation asymmetries in ACLR patients. This raises concerns about long‐term safety and health during fast walking. Fast walking, not self‐selected speed, is beneficial for identifying postoperative gait asymmetries in ACLR patients.

Publisher

Wiley

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