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  4. Association between changes in the knee adduction moment and changes in knee pain and function in response to non-surgical biomechanical interventions for medial knee osteoarthritis: a systematic review
 
review article

Association between changes in the knee adduction moment and changes in knee pain and function in response to non-surgical biomechanical interventions for medial knee osteoarthritis: a systematic review

Pereira, Luis C.
•
Runhaar, Jos
•
Favre, Julien
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December 1, 2021
European Journal Of Physical And Rehabilitation Medicine

INTRODUCTION: There is lack of understanding of the relationship between knee adduction moment (KAM) reductions and improvements in pain or function in patients with knee osteoarthritis (KOA). Moreover, there is no systematic review describing the longitudinal relationship between KAM changes and subsequent changes in pain and/or physical function. We aimed to: 1) investigate the relationship between changes in KAM induced by non-surgical biomechanical interventions and consecutive changes in pain and/or physical function in patients with medial KOA and; 2) compare this relationship for different interventions. EVIDENCE ACQUISITION: We considered eligible all RCTs using biomechanical interventions aimed to reduce KAM in KOA patients, that measured pain/function. We used Cohen's d effect size to quantify outcome measurements. EVIDENCE SYNTHESIS: Fourteen papers reporting 11 studies were identified. Braces were tested in 6 studies, insoles in 5 studies, shoes in 3 studies and gait retraining in 2 studies. Methodological differences were large among studies. Large effect sizes (>0.8) changes in pain/function were observed with interventions having at least a small KAM effect size (>0.2), suggesting an association between KAM and pain/function changes. A linear trend was observed between inter-intervention KAM and VAS pain effect sizes, based on 4 studies. No firm conclusions could be drawn for the different intervention types. CONCLUSIONS: There was a trend toward larger KAM reductions leading to larger improvements in pain/function in non-surgical biome-chanical interventions. Additional high-quality RCT with consistent methodology are needed to fully characterize the association between KAM and pain/function changes.

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Type
review article
DOI
10.23736/S1973-9087.21.06828-3
Web of Science ID

WOS:000734175600011

Author(s)
Pereira, Luis C.
Runhaar, Jos
Favre, Julien
Jolles, Brigitte M.  
Bierma-Zeinstra, Sita
Date Issued

2021-12-01

Publisher

EDIZIONI MINERVA MEDICA

Published in
European Journal Of Physical And Rehabilitation Medicine
Volume

57

Issue

6

Start page

948

End page

958

Subjects

Rehabilitation

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osteoarthritis

•

knee

•

biomechanical phenomena

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systematic review

•

laterally wedged insoles

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gait modifications

•

physical function

•

disease severity

•

risk-factors

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base-line

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compartment

•

walking

•

braces

•

people

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
IBI-STI  
Available on Infoscience
January 15, 2022
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/184553
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