Biomechanical measures of knee joint mobilization

被引:15
|
作者
Silvernail, Jason [1 ]
Gill, Norman [1 ]
Teyhen, Deydre [1 ,2 ]
Allison, Stephen [1 ]
机构
[1] Brooke Army Med Ctr, Orthopaed Manual Phys Therapy, San Antonio, TX USA
[2] Baylor Univ, US Army, Doctoral Program Phys Therapy, Ft Sam Houston, TX USA
关键词
Knee Joint; Mobilization; Manual therapy; Biomechanics; Joint; Orthopedic; Force; Reliability;
D O I
10.1179/2042618611Y.0000000012
中图分类号
R49 [康复医学];
学科分类号
100215 ;
摘要
Background and purpose: The purpose of this study was to quantify the biomechanical properties of specific manual therapy techniques in patients with symptomatic knee osteoarthritis. Methods: Twenty subjects (7 female/13 male, age 54 +/- 8 years, ht 1.7 +/- 0.1 m, wt 94.2 +/- 21.8 kg) participated in this study. One physical therapist delivered joint mobilizations (tibiofemoral extension and flexion; patellofemoral medial- lateral and inferior glide) at two grades (Maitland's grade III and grade IV). A capacitance-based pressure mat was used to capture biomechanical characteristics of force and frequency during 2 trials of 15 second mobilizations. Statistical analysis included intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC3,1) for intrarater reliability and 264 repeated measures analyses of variance and post- hoc comparison tests. Results: Force (Newtons) measurements (mean, max.) for grade III were: extension 45, 74; flexion 39, 61; medial-lateral glide 20, 34; inferior glide 16, 27. Force (Newtons) measurements (mean, max.) for grade IV were: extension 57, 76; flexion 47, 68; medial-lateral glide 23, 36; inferior glide 18, 35. Frequency (Hz) measurements were between 0.9 and 1.2 for grade III, and between 2.1 and 2.4 for grade IV. ICCs were above 0.90 for almost all measures. Discussion and conclusion: Maximum force measures were between the ranges reported for cervical and lumbar mobilization at similar grades. Mean force measures were greater at grade IV than III. Oscillation frequency and peak-to- peak amplitude measures were consistent with the grade performed (i.e. greater frequency at grade IV, greater peak-to-peak amplitude at grade III). Intrarater reliability for force, peak-topeak amplitude and oscillation frequency for knee joint mobilizations was excellent.
引用
收藏
页码:162 / 171
页数:10
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Application of the Motion Capture System in the Biomechanical Analysis of the Injured Knee Joint
    Otworowski, Jakub
    Walczak, Tomasz
    Gramala, Adam
    Grabski, Jakub K.
    Tripi, Maurizio
    Pogorzala, Adam M.
    ADVANCES IN MANUFACTURING II, VOL 4 - MECHANICAL ENGINEERING, 2019, : 257 - 265
  • [22] Biomechanical analysis of load on intercondylar surface of the knee joint in frontal projection
    Burlakov E.V.
    Alatov D.V.
    Makushin V.D.
    Sablukova L.L.
    Biomedical Engineering, 2008, 42 (2) : 77 - 81
  • [23] Predicting dynamic knee joint load with clinical measures in people with medial knee osteoarthritis
    Hunt, Michael A.
    Bennell, Kim L.
    KNEE, 2011, 18 (04) : 231 - 234
  • [24] Automated personalization of biomechanical knee model
    Yurova, Alexandra
    Lychagin, Alexey
    Kalinsky, Eugene
    Vassilevski, Yuri
    Elizarov, Mikhail
    Garkavi, Andrey
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF COMPUTER ASSISTED RADIOLOGY AND SURGERY, 2024, 19 (05) : 891 - 902
  • [25] Joint Mobilization Enhances Mechanisms of Conditioned Pain Modulation in Individuals With Osteoarthritis of the Knee
    Courtney, Carol A.
    Steffen, Alana D.
    Fernandez-de-las-Penas, Cesar
    Kim, John
    Chmell, Samuel J.
    JOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC & SPORTS PHYSICAL THERAPY, 2016, 46 (03) : 168 - 176
  • [26] The Effect of Anterior Cruciate Ligament Injury on the Biomechanical Behavior of Human Knee Joint
    Wang, Tianfu
    Hao, Zhixiu
    Wan, Chao
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2009 2ND INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON BIOMEDICAL ENGINEERING AND INFORMATICS, VOLS 1-4, 2009, : 425 - 429
  • [27] CLINICAL-APPLICATION OF BIOMECHANICAL AND FUNCTIONAL ANATOMICAL DATA OF THE KNEE-JOINT
    FRIEDERICH, NF
    MULLER, W
    OBRIEN, WR
    ORTHOPADE, 1992, 21 (01): : 41 - 50
  • [28] Biomechanical analysis on the stop-jump action of patients with knee joint injury
    Liu L.
    International Journal Bioautomation, 2018, 22 (01) : 49 - 56
  • [29] Posterolateral aspect and stability of the knee joint. II. Posterolateral instability and effect of isolated and combined posterolateral reconstruction on knee stability: a biomechanical study
    Krudwig, WK
    Witzel, U
    Ullrich, K
    KNEE SURGERY SPORTS TRAUMATOLOGY ARTHROSCOPY, 2002, 10 (02) : 91 - 95
  • [30] Biomechanical study of patellofemoral joint instability
    Senavongse, W
    Third International Conference on Experimental Mechanics and Third Conference of the Asian-Committee-on-Experimental-Mechanics, Pts 1and 2, 2005, 5852 : 677 - 680