Impaired hemodynamics of the patella in patients with patellofemoral pain: A case–control study

Author:

Ophey Martin J.123ORCID,Westerweel Anne4,van Oort Maxime4,van den Berg Robert356,Kerkhoffs Gino M. M. J.278,Tak Igor J. R.3789ORCID

Affiliation:

1. IJsveldFysio—Private Physical Therapy Clinic Nijmegen The Netherlands

2. Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and Sports Medicine Amsterdam UMC, AMC location Amsterdam The Netherlands

3. ESP Science and Education Vienna Austria

4. Master Biomedical Sciences RU—Radboud University Nijmegen The Netherlands

5. Physical Therapy Department FH Burgenland—University of Applied Science Pinkafeld Austria

6. AIM—Austrian Institute of Management Advanced Physiotherapy & Management Eisenstadt Austria

7. Amsterdam Collaboration on Health & Safety in Sports (ACHSS) IOC Research Center Amsterdam The Netherlands

8. Academic Center for Evidence‐based Sports Medicine (ACES) Amsterdam The Netherlands

9. Physiotherapy Utrecht Oost—Sports Rehabilitation and Manual Therapy Utrecht The Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractPurposeAccording to the homeostasis model, patellofemoral pain (PFP) arises as a consequence of disturbed homeostasis of anterior structures of the knee due to vascular insufficiency. Near‐infrared spectroscopy (NIRS) allows to measure changes of concentrations (µmol/cm2) of (de)‐oxygenated hemoglobine (HHb and O2Hb). The aim was to study differences in patellar hemodynamics between patients and healthy controls.MethodsHemodynamics of patients (n = 30 [female = 20, age = 21.5, BMI = 22.9]) and controls (n = 30 (female = 18, age = 21.4, BMI = 22.4]) were evaluated for two activities (‘Prolonged Sitting’ and ‘Stair Descent’). Blinding for health status was implemented.ResultsDuring ‘Prolonged Sitting’, PFP patients exhibited smaller decreases in mean changes for HHb (PFP [M = −1.5 to −1.9], healthy controls [M = −2.0 to −2.3]) and O2Hb (PFP [M = −2.0 to −3.2], healthy controls [M = −3.4 to −4.1]). However, these differences were statistically non‐significant (p = 0.14–0.82 and p = 0.056–0.18, respectively). Conversely, for ‘Stair Descent’, PFP patients showed statistically significant smaller decreases in mean changes for HHb (PFP [M = −1.9, SD = 1.8], healthy controls [M = −2.5, SD = 1.7], p = 0.043) and O2Hb (PFP [M = −3.2, SD = 3.2], healthy controls [M = −4.9, SD = 2.7], p = 0.004).ConclusionsThe differences suggest potential impairment in patellar hemodynamics in PFP patients, providing support for the homeostasis model. Evidence‐based treatment strategies targeting patellar hemodynamics should be further refined and subjected to evaluation in clinical trials.Level of EvidenceLevel III.

Publisher

Wiley

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