CORR Insights®:闭式运动链运动中的TKA运动学与患者报告的结果相关吗?初步分析。

D. D’Lima
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引用次数: 3

摘要

尽管对全膝关节置换术前后膝关节运动学进行了广泛的分析,但其与术后患者报告的预后之间的联系并不令人信服。造成这种情况的一些原因包括:与正常膝关节相比,tka后膝关节的生物力学存在差异,患者之间的运动学差异很大,患者选择偏差,以及研究活动受到透视视野的限制。先前的研究表明,某些运动学特征,如矛盾或反向回滚和髁突抬起,会产生负面的生物力学后果,但它们尚未与临床患者报告的结果有决定性的联系[3,6,7]。开放动力学链式膝关节伸展的运动学主要由伸展机制和胫股关节几何形状驱动。闭式运动链式膝关节伸展,当足部着地时,会产生更高的膝关节力,受到更大的前后运动、髁突升降和轴向旋转的影响,因此有潜在的暴露不稳定性[3,6,7]。Van Onsem及其同事[14]的前瞻性研究是迄今为止我读过的所有研究中最接近于将特定的术后运动学模式与患者报告的结果联系起来的研究。作者发现具有不同患者报告结果测量(PROMs)的患者群之间的闭链运动学存在差异,但他们小心翼翼地不去推测膝关节运动学差异的生物力学原因。他们恰当地将他们的研究命名为“初步分析”,因为他们的研究提出的问题比回答的问题更多。
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CORR Insights®: Are TKA Kinematics During Closed Kinetic Chain Exercises Associated with Patient-reported Outcomes? A Preliminary Analysis.
Despite the extensive analysis of knee kinematics before and after TKA, the links to postoperative patient-reported outcomes have been less-than compelling. Some reasons for this include the differences in the biomechanics of the post-TKA knee relative to normal knees, the high patient-to-patient variation in kinematics, patient selection bias, and the activities studied being limited by the fluoroscopic field of view. Previous studies have shown that certain kinematic features, such as paradoxical or reverse roll-back and condylar lift-off, have negative biomechanical consequences but they have yet to be conclusively linked to clinical patientreported outcomes [3, 6, 7]. The kinematics of open-kinetic-chain knee extension are driven largely by the extensormechanism and by tibiofemoral articular geometry. Closed-kinetic-chain knee extension, with the foot planted on the ground, generates higher knee forces, is subject to greater anteroposterior motion, condylar lift-off, and axial rotation, and therefore has potential for unmasking instability [3, 6, 7]. The prospective study by Van Onsem and colleagues [14] comes closest of all the studies I have read thus far to linking specific patterns of post-operative kinematics to patient-reported outcomes. The authors found differences in closed-chain kinematics between clusters of patients with disparate patient-reported outcome measures (PROMs), but theywere careful not to speculate on the biomechanical reasons for the differences in knee kinematics. They appropriately qualified the title of their study as “A Preliminary Analysis” because their study raises more questions than it answers.
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