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INFLUENCE OF LOWER EXTREMITY STATIC ALIGNMENT ON DYNAMIC KNEE VALGUS IN ADOLESCENTS FOLLOWING ACL RECONSTRUCTION

BACKGROUND: Dynamic limb valgus, particularly high knee abduction moments, are a known risk factor for anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury. High knee abduction moments may result from poor static anatomic limb alignment, faulty biomechanics, or a combination of both. The distinction is important...

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Autores principales: VandenBerg, Curtis D., Mueske, Nicole M., Abousamra, Oussama, Feifer, Daniel, Sarkisova, Natalya, Katzel, Mia J., Pace, J. Lee, Wren, Tishya A. L.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: SAGE Publications 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7222275/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967120S00144
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author VandenBerg, Curtis D.
Mueske, Nicole M.
Abousamra, Oussama
Feifer, Daniel
Sarkisova, Natalya
Katzel, Mia J.
Pace, J. Lee
Wren, Tishya A. L.
author_facet VandenBerg, Curtis D.
Mueske, Nicole M.
Abousamra, Oussama
Feifer, Daniel
Sarkisova, Natalya
Katzel, Mia J.
Pace, J. Lee
Wren, Tishya A. L.
author_sort VandenBerg, Curtis D.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Dynamic limb valgus, particularly high knee abduction moments, are a known risk factor for anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury. High knee abduction moments may result from poor static anatomic limb alignment, faulty biomechanics, or a combination of both. The distinction is important because anatomic limb alignment is difficult to change, while dynamic factors can be addressed through neuromuscular or biomechanical training. HYPOTHESIS/PURPOSE: This study assessed the influence of static (lower extremity anatomic alignment) and dynamic (kinematic and kinetic) factors on external knee abduction moments during side-step cutting in uninjured adolescent athletes. METHODS: This retrospective study included 43 adolescents with recent unilateral ACL reconstruction (mean age 15.3 years, SD 2.0, range 10-21; 17/43 female; 3-12 months post-surgery, mean 6.5, SD 2.1). Frontal plane hip to ankle imaging (EOS) was used to measure mechanical axis deviation (perpendicular distance from the center of the femoral condyles to the mechanical axis line connecting the center of the femoral head to the center of the talar dome) and tibial-femoral angle. Femoral anteversion was measured during physical examination. 3D motion capture provided lower extremity kinematics and kinetics during quiet standing and during the loading phase (initial contact to peak knee flexion) of an anticipated 45° side-step cut, with 2-3 trials per limb averaged for analysis. Relationships among imaging, static motion capture, and dynamic motion capture measures were investigated using correlation, and backward stepwise linear regression was used to evaluate potential predictors of average dynamic knee abduction moment. RESULTS: Dynamic knee abduction moment was best predicted by a combination of dynamic measures: knee and hip abduction, external knee rotation, lateral trunk lean towards the planting foot, and ankle inversion during cutting (Table 1.1). Although EOS frontal plane tibial-femoral angle was correlated with dynamic knee abduction moment (r=0.24, p=0.02), no static/anatomic variables entered the model once the dynamic measures were included. CONCLUSION: Knee abduction moments during side-step cutting were related to dynamic factors reflecting frontal plane trunk, hip, knee, and ankle motion, as well as external knee rotation. Static (anatomic) lower limb alignment did not influence knee abduction moments once these dynamic factors were considered. Knee abduction moments and ACL injury risk are therefore not dictated by anatomic alignment and can be altered through neuromuscular/biomechanical training.
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spelling pubmed-72222752020-05-18 INFLUENCE OF LOWER EXTREMITY STATIC ALIGNMENT ON DYNAMIC KNEE VALGUS IN ADOLESCENTS FOLLOWING ACL RECONSTRUCTION VandenBerg, Curtis D. Mueske, Nicole M. Abousamra, Oussama Feifer, Daniel Sarkisova, Natalya Katzel, Mia J. Pace, J. Lee Wren, Tishya A. L. Orthop J Sports Med Article BACKGROUND: Dynamic limb valgus, particularly high knee abduction moments, are a known risk factor for anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injury. High knee abduction moments may result from poor static anatomic limb alignment, faulty biomechanics, or a combination of both. The distinction is important because anatomic limb alignment is difficult to change, while dynamic factors can be addressed through neuromuscular or biomechanical training. HYPOTHESIS/PURPOSE: This study assessed the influence of static (lower extremity anatomic alignment) and dynamic (kinematic and kinetic) factors on external knee abduction moments during side-step cutting in uninjured adolescent athletes. METHODS: This retrospective study included 43 adolescents with recent unilateral ACL reconstruction (mean age 15.3 years, SD 2.0, range 10-21; 17/43 female; 3-12 months post-surgery, mean 6.5, SD 2.1). Frontal plane hip to ankle imaging (EOS) was used to measure mechanical axis deviation (perpendicular distance from the center of the femoral condyles to the mechanical axis line connecting the center of the femoral head to the center of the talar dome) and tibial-femoral angle. Femoral anteversion was measured during physical examination. 3D motion capture provided lower extremity kinematics and kinetics during quiet standing and during the loading phase (initial contact to peak knee flexion) of an anticipated 45° side-step cut, with 2-3 trials per limb averaged for analysis. Relationships among imaging, static motion capture, and dynamic motion capture measures were investigated using correlation, and backward stepwise linear regression was used to evaluate potential predictors of average dynamic knee abduction moment. RESULTS: Dynamic knee abduction moment was best predicted by a combination of dynamic measures: knee and hip abduction, external knee rotation, lateral trunk lean towards the planting foot, and ankle inversion during cutting (Table 1.1). Although EOS frontal plane tibial-femoral angle was correlated with dynamic knee abduction moment (r=0.24, p=0.02), no static/anatomic variables entered the model once the dynamic measures were included. CONCLUSION: Knee abduction moments during side-step cutting were related to dynamic factors reflecting frontal plane trunk, hip, knee, and ankle motion, as well as external knee rotation. Static (anatomic) lower limb alignment did not influence knee abduction moments once these dynamic factors were considered. Knee abduction moments and ACL injury risk are therefore not dictated by anatomic alignment and can be altered through neuromuscular/biomechanical training. SAGE Publications 2020-04-30 /pmc/articles/PMC7222275/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967120S00144 Text en © The Author(s) 2020 https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ This open-access article is published and distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution - NonCommercial - No Derivatives License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/), which permits the noncommercial use, distribution, and reproduction of the article in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited. You may not alter, transform, or build upon this article without the permission of the Author(s). For article reuse guidelines, please visit SAGE’s website at http://www.sagepub.com/journals-permissions.
spellingShingle Article
VandenBerg, Curtis D.
Mueske, Nicole M.
Abousamra, Oussama
Feifer, Daniel
Sarkisova, Natalya
Katzel, Mia J.
Pace, J. Lee
Wren, Tishya A. L.
INFLUENCE OF LOWER EXTREMITY STATIC ALIGNMENT ON DYNAMIC KNEE VALGUS IN ADOLESCENTS FOLLOWING ACL RECONSTRUCTION
title INFLUENCE OF LOWER EXTREMITY STATIC ALIGNMENT ON DYNAMIC KNEE VALGUS IN ADOLESCENTS FOLLOWING ACL RECONSTRUCTION
title_full INFLUENCE OF LOWER EXTREMITY STATIC ALIGNMENT ON DYNAMIC KNEE VALGUS IN ADOLESCENTS FOLLOWING ACL RECONSTRUCTION
title_fullStr INFLUENCE OF LOWER EXTREMITY STATIC ALIGNMENT ON DYNAMIC KNEE VALGUS IN ADOLESCENTS FOLLOWING ACL RECONSTRUCTION
title_full_unstemmed INFLUENCE OF LOWER EXTREMITY STATIC ALIGNMENT ON DYNAMIC KNEE VALGUS IN ADOLESCENTS FOLLOWING ACL RECONSTRUCTION
title_short INFLUENCE OF LOWER EXTREMITY STATIC ALIGNMENT ON DYNAMIC KNEE VALGUS IN ADOLESCENTS FOLLOWING ACL RECONSTRUCTION
title_sort influence of lower extremity static alignment on dynamic knee valgus in adolescents following acl reconstruction
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7222275/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/2325967120S00144
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