Gaetano Di Stasio, Carles Vergés-Salas, Elena de Planell-Mas
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: In patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA), the pathologic progression of lower-limb biomechanics is established. Although specific aspects of RA gait patterns have been studied and described, we are aware of no studies of gait pattern compensations across the entire disease course. This study aimed to describe a model that could predict the evolution of lower-limb pathomechanics in patients with RA.
Methods: A literature review was conducted of electronic databases (MEDLINE, PEDro, Trip Database, DOAJ, BioMed Central, PLoS Clinical Trials, ScienceDirect, CRD York University, AHRQ, NICE, and Cochrane Library) to October 3, 2023.
Results: A theory was developed that all people with RA induce or augment gait evolution syndromes following the same biomechanical course. Specifically, we postulate rheumatoid equinus syndrome, rheumatoid abnormal pronation syndrome, and rheumatoid shuffle syndrome, which have never been described before.
Conclusions: A new model of the evolution of gait compensation in RA is proposed. An important challenge of RA is that it increases the risk of ulcerative lesions, falls, pain, fractures, and health-care costs. The proposed model can be used to reduce morbidity in this patient group by helping explain and reduce the pain, deformity, and ankylosis of foot RA.
期刊介绍:
The Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association, the official journal of the Association, is the oldest and most frequently cited peer-reviewed journal in the profession of foot and ankle medicine. Founded in 1907 and appearing 6 times per year, it publishes research studies, case reports, literature reviews, special communications, clinical correspondence, letters to the editor, book reviews, and various other types of submissions. The Journal is included in major indexing and abstracting services for biomedical literature.