Abstract
The aim of the study was to investigate whether muscle strength declines before or concurrent with incident knee pain in subjects with and without radiographic knee osteoarthritis. Osteoarthritis initiative participants with incident knee pain (occurrence of infrequent/frequent knee pain during the past 12 mos at two consecutive follow-up time points (either years Y3 + Y4 or Y4 + Y5) were compared with controls (no incident knee pain) with 2-yr changes in knee extensor strength during BL➔Y2 (before) and Y2➔Y4 (concurrent). Two hundred two knees (49% women, 40% radiographic knee osteoarthritis) displayed incident pain, and 439 did not (46% women, 23% radiographic knee osteoarthritis). Women with radiographic knee osteoarthritis displayed a significantly greater (P = 0.04) reduction in knee extensor strength concurrent with incident pain compared with controls (mean = -17.6 N vs. +4.5 N), but men did not. A similar trend was observed in women without radiographic knee osteoarthritis, but this was not statistically significant (P = 0.08). There was no significant relationship with change in extensor strength before incident pain (P ≥ 0.43). These results suggest that in women, incident knee pain is accompanied by a concurrent reduction in knee extensor strength, whereas loss in strength does not precede incident knee pain. The findings encourage interventional studies that attempt to attenuate a decline in extensor strength once knee symptoms occur.
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