Abstract
BackgroundAberrant gait biomechanics contribute to post-traumatic knee osteoarthritis development following anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction (ACLR). Walking gait biomechanics are typically evaluated post-ACLR by identifying discrete, peak values in the load acceptance phase of gait (i.e. first 50 %). As these approaches evaluate a single time instant during the gait cycle, functional data analysis (FDA) techniques that evaluate the entire stance phase waveform are becoming more common in the literature. However, it is unclear if these analysis approaches identify the same biomechanical phenomena. Research questionThe purpose of this study was to determine whether four gait biomechanics analysis approaches identify the same aberrant gait characteristics in individuals with ACLR. MethodsTwenty-four individuals with ACLR and 24 healthy controls completed gait analyses on an instrumented treadmill. Four analysis approaches were employed to compare the vertical ground reaction force and sagittal knee angles and moments during the first 50 % of the stance phase between groups and between limbs in the ACLR cohort: 1) comparison of peak values from individual trials (Peak), 2) comparison of peak values from time-normalized ensemble waveforms (Ensemble Peak), 3) FDA via functional ANCOVA (FANCOVA), and 4) FDA evaluating overlap of the 95 % confidence intervals for each waveform (FDA-CI). ResultsThe Peak, Ensemble Peak, and FANCOVA approaches identified highly similar group and limb differences in the biomechanics outcomes with respect to both magnitude and temporal location. However, the FANCOVA approach indicated that these differences were distributed across large portions of the load acceptance phase and that differences existed outside the first 50 % of stance. The FDA-CI approach was generally not effective for identifying aberrant gait biomechanics. SignificancePeak and FANCOVA approaches to gait analysis provide similar findings. Future research is necessary to determine if the additional information afforded by FANCOVA provides insight regarding the mechanical pathogenesis of post-traumatic knee osteoarthritis.
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