Comparison of Clinical and Dynamic Knee Function in Patients with Anterior Cruciate Ligament Deficiency

Author:

Patel Rohita R.1,Hurwitz Debra E.123,Bush-Joseph Charles A.1,Bach Bernard R.1,Andriacchi Thomas P.14

Affiliation:

1. Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Rush Medical College Rush University, Chicago, Illinois

2. Department of Internal Medicine, Section of Rheumatology, Chicago, Illinois

3. Department of Anatomy, Rush Medical College of Rush University, Rush-Presbyterian-St. Luke's Medical Center, Chicago, Illinois

4. Department of Mechanical Engineering/Functional Restoration, Stanford University, Stanford, California

Abstract

Background Whether passive measures of isokinetic muscle strength deficits and knee laxity are related to the dynamic function of the anterior cruciate ligament-deficient knee remains unclear. Hypotheses Arthrometer measurements are not predictive of peak external knee flexion moment (net quadriceps muscle moment), isokinetic quadriceps muscle strength correlates with peak external knee flexion moment (net quadriceps muscle moment), and isokinetic hamstring muscle strength correlates with peak external knee extension moment (net flexor muscle moment). Study Design Cross-sectional study. Methods Gait analysis was used to assess dynamic function during walking, jogging, and stair climbing in 44 subjects with unilateral anterior cruciate ligament deficiency and 44 control subjects. Passive knee laxity and isokinetic quadriceps and hamstring muscle strength were also measured. Results Arthrometer measurements did not correlate with peak external flexion or extension moments in any of the activities tested or with isokinetic quadriceps or hamstring muscle strength. Test subjects also had a significantly reduced peak external flexion moment during all three jogging activities and stair climbing compared with the control subjects and this was correlated with significantly reduced quadriceps muscle strength. Conclusions Absolute knee laxity difference did not correlate with dynamic knee function as assessed by gait analysis and should not be used as a sole predictor for the outcome of treatment. Patients with greater than normal strength in the anterior cruciate ligament-deficient limb performed low- and high-stress activities in a more normal fashion than those with normal or less-than-normal strength.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Physical Therapy, Sports Therapy and Rehabilitation,Orthopedics and Sports Medicine

Reference27 articles.

1. A study of lower-limb mechanics during stair-climbing.

2. AndriacchiTP, KramerGM, LandonGC: The biomechanics of running and knee injuries, in FinermanG (ed): American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons Symposium on Sport Medicine: The Knee. St Louis, CV Mosby Co, 1985, pp 23–32

3. AndriacchiTP, NatarajanRN, HurwitzDE: Musculoskeletal dynamics, locomotion, and clinical applications, in MowVC, HayesWC (eds): Basic Orthopaedic Biomechanics. Second edition. Philadelphia, Lippincott-Raven, 1997, pp 37–67

4. Gait Analysis as a Tool to Assess Joint Kinetics

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