Determining the relationship between tibiofemoral geometry and passive motion with partial least squares regression

Author:

O'Rourke Dermot12ORCID,Bucci Francesca1,Burton William S.3,Al‐Dirini Rami1ORCID,Taylor Mark1,Martelli Saulo1

Affiliation:

1. Medical Device Research Institute, College of Science and Engineering Flinders University Adelaide South Australia Australia

2. School of Mechanical, Medical and Process Engineering Queensland University of Technology Brisbane South Australia Australia

3. Center for Orthopaedic Biomechanics University of Denver Denver Colorado United States

Abstract

AbstractTibiofemoral geometry influences knee passive motion and understanding their relationship can provide insight into knee function and mechanisms of injury. However, the complexity of the geometric constraints has made characterizing the relationship challenging. The aim of this study was to determine the tibiofemoral bone geometries that explain the variation in passive motion using a partial least squares regression (PLSR) model. The PLSR model was developed for 29 healthy cadaver specimens (10 female, 19 male) with femur and tibia geometries retrieved from MRI images and six degree‐of‐freedom tibiofemoral kinematics determined during a flexion cycle with minimal medial pressure. The first 13 partial least squares (PLS) components explained 90% of the variation in the kinematics and accounted for 89% of the variation in geometry. The first three PLS components which shared geometric changes to particular surface congruencies of the tibial and femoral condyles explained the most amount of variation in the kinematics, primarily in anterior–posterior translation. Meanwhile, variations in femoral condyle width and the intercondylar space, tibia plateau size and conformity, and tibia eminences heights in PLS 2 and 4 explained the greatest amount of variation in internal–external rotation. PLS 4 exhibiting variation in overall size of the knee accounted for greatest amount of variation in geometry (50%) and had the greatest influence on the abduction–adduction motion and some on internal–external rotation but, overall, explained only a small proportion of the kinematics (10%). Elucidating the complex relationship between tibiofemoral bone geometry and passive kinematics may help personalize treatments for improved functional outcomes in patients.

Funder

Australian Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Orthopedics and Sports Medicine

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