Lower Extremity Muscle Activity Patterns During Lateral (Frontal) Side Stepping Task Modulation From Different Heights

Author(s):  
Dinesh Bhatia ◽  
Mario Novo ◽  
Ranu Jung ◽  
Denis Brunt ◽  
Tatiana Bejarano

Different muscle groups function in a synchronized and coordinated manner to perform a given task, wherein the activity of one muscle group affects that of another (1, 3). Osteoarthritis (OA) is a common, chronic joint disease characterized by pain, disability and progressive loss of function. It is the most common musculoskeletal complaint worldwide and is associated with significant health and welfare costs (2, 7). The knee is the most frequently affected joint of the lower limb and prevalence of knee OA increases with age (6). Several studies have shown that muscle recruitment patterns and neuromuscular efficiency are different for patients with OA compared to normal controls during simple closed chain activities (4). However, no studies have investigated frontal plane control or the modulation of control due to, for example, a change in time or distance in OA (5).

Author(s):  
Fadi Al Khatib ◽  
Afif Gouissem ◽  
Raouf Mbarki ◽  
Malek Adouni

Knee osteoarthritis (OA) is a growing source of pain and disability. Obesity is the most important avoidable risk factor underlying knee OA. The processes by which obesity impacts osteoarthritis are of tremendous interest to osteoarthritis researchers and physicians, where the joint mechanical load is one of the pathways generally thought to cause or intensify the disease process. In the current work, we developed a hybrid framework that simultaneously incorporates a detailed finite element model of the knee joint within a musculoskeletal model to compute lower extremity muscle forces and knee joint stresses in normal-weight (N) and obese (OB) subjects during the stance phase gait. This model accounts for the synergy between the active musculature and passive structures. In comparing OB subjects and normal ones, forces significantly increased in all muscle groups at most instances of stance. Mainly, much higher activation was computed with lateral hamstrings and medial gastrocnemius. Cartilage contact average pressure was mostly supported by the medial plateau and increased by 22%, with a larger portion of the load transmitted via menisci. This medial compartment experienced larger relative movement and cartilage stresses in the normal subjects and continued to do so with a higher level in the obese subjects. Finally, the developed bioengineering frame and the examined parameters during this investigation might be useful clinically in evaluating the initiation and propagation of knee OA.


2018 ◽  
Vol 34 (6) ◽  
pp. 442-447 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jinger S. Gottschall ◽  
Bryce Hastings ◽  
Zachary Becker

Popular topics for upper-body resistance training involve the differences between hand positions, open versus closed chain exercises, and movement variations for the novice to the advanced. It was hypothesized that there will be no difference between closed (push-up) versus open (bench press) chain exercises for the primary muscle group activity nor would there be a difference between push-ups on the toes versus knees with respect to the percent contribution of each muscle. Surface muscle activity was measured for 8 upper-body and core muscles during a sequence of push-up and bench press variations with a normalized weight for 12 active men. Each participant completed push-ups and bench press exercises at each of 3 hand positions. The results demonstrated that there were few differences between closed versus open chain exercises for the primary muscle groups with the exception of core activation. In addition, in general, narrow hand positions yielded greater activation, and there were no significant differences between push-ups on the toes versus knees with respect to the percent contribution for the primary muscle groups. In conclusion, closed chain exercises may be preferred for functional training, and knee push-ups may be ideal as a novice push-up variation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Juracy Barbosa Santos ◽  
Lanussy Rassi Mangili ◽  
Mylene Rassi Mangili ◽  
Isabela Rassi Mangili ◽  
Durval Ribas Filho

Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most prevalent joint disease, considered the rheumatic condition with the greatest consequences in terms of socioeconomic impacts, especially knee osteoarthritis since it makes walking difficult. To date, there is no cure for OA, so available treatments aim to reduce symptoms such as pain and inflammation, maintain joint mobility, and limit the loss of function. As OA has a known inflammatory component, it is believed that nutrition can play a vital role in the prevention and ongoing management of OA. This article aims to analyze the available evidence in the prevention and treatment of knee OA with a dietary intervention that may play a potential role in the management of the disease. To carry out this literature review, articles were searched in the Scielo, Pubmed, and Bireme databases with the time frame of the last 10 years. The results showed that some nutrients, vitamins, and antioxidants are widely discussed in the literature in the treatment and prevention of the disease. Management of free radicals is necessary and the influence of nutrients and diet on cartilage and OA metabolism may represent a long-term adjuvant alternative in the treatment of patients with knee OA. Effects of dietary modifications on lipid and cholesterol profiles, adequate vitamin levels, and weight reduction in obese patients may influence the course of the disease.


2021 ◽  
Vol 80 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. 418.1-418
Author(s):  
I. Lorenzo ◽  
U. Nogueira-Recalde ◽  
N. Oreiro ◽  
J. A. Pinto Tasende ◽  
M. Lotz ◽  
...  

Background:In Osteoarthritis (OA), defects in macroautophagy (autophagy) are evident and precede joint damage. Indeed, pharmacological activation of autophagy protects against joint damage.Objectives:Therefore, identifying hallmarks associated with specific autophagy subtypes could shed light to fundamental mechanisms of joint disease.Methods:A comparative analysis of 35 autophagy genes was performed from blood from the Prospective OA Cohort of A Coruña (PROCOAC). Non-OA subjects (Age:61,44±1,16 years; BMI:25,25±0,52; Females, n=18) and Knee OA subjects (Age:65,50±1,05 years; BMI:29,55±0,67; Females, n=18, OA grade III-IV) were profiled using an autophagy gene expression array by SYBR green qPCR. Confirmatory studies were performed in blood from Non-OA subjects (Age:60,13±1,12 years; BMI:24,85±0,59; Females; n=30) and Knee-OA subjects (Age:68,4±1,11 years; BMI:29,65±0,55; Females; n=30, OA grade III-IV) by Taqman qPCR. The candidate gene was evaluated in human knee joint tissues (cartilage, meniscus, ligaments, synovium) with different KL grades (Age: KL0=28,3±4,50; KL2=77±6,08; KL4=62,3±3,05, n=3) and in both spontaneous aging (2, 6, 12, 18, and 30 months old, n=3) and surgically-induced OA (10 weeks after surgery, n=4) in mice by IHC. The functional consequences were studied in T/C28a2 and primary human OA chondrocytes. Autophagy, FOXO, Chaperone-mediated autophagy (CMA), inflammation, and cellular senescence were analyzing by gene and protein expression. Moreover, oxidative stress and cell death were evaluated by FACS. The contribution of CMA to chondrocyte homeostasis was evaluated by studying the capacity of CMA to restore proteostasis upon autophagy deficiency by siATG5.Results:15 autophagy-related genes were significantly downregulated in blood from knee OA patients compared to non-OA patients. No significant upregulation was found for any studied gene, although a trend towards upregulation was found in genes involved in the mTOR pathway. Four key autophagy-related genes, including ATG16L2, ATG12, ATG4B and MAP1LC3B were found downregulated in knee OA patients. Interestingly, HSP90AA1 and HSPA8, CMA markers involved in stress response and protein folding, were downregulated. Confirmatory studies showed a significant downregulation of MAP1LC3B and HSP90AA1 in blood from knee OA patients. Remarkably, HSP90A was found reduced in femoral cartilage (medial and lateral), meniscus and ACL. Moreover, this reduction was higher in medial cartilage compared to lateral cartilage and meniscus, while in synovial membrane, HSP90A expression was found increased. This expression signature was dependent on OA grade severity. In addition, we observed a decrease of HSP90A with aging and OA in mice. The functional consequences of HSP90AA1 gene silencing are related to an increase in NFκB, MMP13, and p16 expression. Interestingly, LAMP2A, a key CMA mediator, HSPA8, MAP1LC3B and FoxO1 expression were upregulated in chondrocytes with HSP90AA1 deficiency, which might indicate an early response to maintain homeostasis. On the other hand, LAMP2A protein is decreased upon HSP90AA1 deficiency, while LC3II and p62 were increased, indicating a failure in the autophagy flux that leads to impaired lysosomal degradation.Moreover, p21, p16 and prbS6 were increased upon HSP90AA1 deficiency, besides increasing mitochondrial ROS production and apoptosis. ATG5 silencing blocks autophagy by reducing LC3II and increasing prbs6, p62, p16 and p21. Interestingly, LAMP2A and HSP90A were found increased, indicating a possible compensative activation of CMA in response to autophagy defects. These results support that HSP90A has an important role in chondrocyte homeostasis by participating in the cross-talk between CMA and autophagy.Conclusion:Taking together, we identified HSP90A, a CMA regulator, as critical in chondrocyte homeostasis. These disease mechanisms are relevant in OA and constitute hallmarks potentially useful to prevent OA progression.References:[1]Caramés B, et al. Arthritis Rheum. 2010, 2015;[2]Caramés B, et al. Ann Rheum Dis. 2012.Disclosure of Interests:None declared


2021 ◽  
Vol 22 (11) ◽  
pp. 5711
Author(s):  
Julian Zacharjasz ◽  
Anna M. Mleczko ◽  
Paweł Bąkowski ◽  
Tomasz Piontek ◽  
Kamilla Bąkowska-Żywicka

Knee osteoarthritis (OA) is a degenerative knee joint disease that results from the breakdown of joint cartilage and underlying bone, affecting about 3.3% of the world's population. As OA is a multifactorial disease, the underlying pathological process is closely associated with genetic changes in articular cartilage and bone. Many studies have focused on the role of small noncoding RNAs in OA and identified numbers of microRNAs that play important roles in regulating bone and cartilage homeostasis. The connection between other types of small noncoding RNAs, especially tRNA-derived fragments and knee osteoarthritis is still elusive. The observation that there is limited information about small RNAs different than miRNAs in knee OA was very surprising to us, especially given the fact that tRNA fragments are known to participate in a plethora of human diseases and a portion of them are even more abundant than miRNAs. Inspired by these findings, in this review we have summarized the possible involvement of microRNAs and tRNA-derived fragments in the pathology of knee osteoarthritis.


Sensors ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 21 (13) ◽  
pp. 4452
Author(s):  
Nicole Zahradka ◽  
Ahad Behboodi ◽  
Ashwini Sansare ◽  
Samuel C. K. Lee

Functional electrical stimulation (FES) walking interventions have demonstrated improvements to gait parameters; however, studies were often confined to stimulation of one or two muscle groups. Increased options such as number of muscle groups targeted, timing of stimulation delivery, and level of stimulation are needed to address subject-specific gait deviations. We aimed to demonstrate the feasibility of using a FES system with increased stimulation options during walking in children with cerebral palsy (CP). Three physical therapists designed individualized stimulation programs for six children with CP to target participant-specific gait deviations. Stimulation settings (pulse duration and current) were tuned to each participant. Participants donned our custom FES system that utilized gait phase detection to control stimulation to lower extremity muscle groups and walked on a treadmill at a self-selected speed. Motion capture data were collected during walking with and without the individualized stimulation program. Eight gait metrics and associated timing were compared between walking conditions. The prescribed participant-specific stimulation programs induced significant change towards typical gait in at least one metric for each participant with one iteration of FES-walking. FES systems with increased stimulation options have the potential to allow the physical therapist to better target the individual’s gait deviations than a one size fits all device.


2010 ◽  
Vol 42A (4) ◽  
pp. 267-282 ◽  
Author(s):  
U. Ungethuem ◽  
T. Haeupl ◽  
H. Witt ◽  
D. Koczan ◽  
V. Krenn ◽  
...  

Rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is a chronic, inflammatory joint disease of unknown etiology and pronounced interpatient heterogeneity. To characterize RA at the molecular level and to uncover pathomechanisms, we performed genome-wide gene expression analysis. We identified a set of 1,054 genes significantly deregulated in pair-wise comparisons between RA and osteoarthritis (OA) patients, RA and normal donors (ND), or OA and ND. Correlation analysis revealed gene sets regulated identically in all three groups. As a prominent example secreted phosphoprotein 1 (SPP1) was identified to be significantly upregulated in RA compared with both OA and ND. SPP1 expression was found to correlate with genes expressed during an inflammatory response, T-cell activation and apoptosis, suggesting common underlying regulatory networks. A subclassification of RA patients was achieved on the basis of proteoglycan 4 (PRG4) expression, distinguishing PRG4 high and low expressors and reflecting the heterogeneity of the disease. In addition, we found that low PRG4 expression was associated with a more aggressive disease stage, which is in accordance with PRG4 loss-of-function mutations causing camptodactyly-arthropathy-coxa vara-pericarditis syndrome. Altogether we provide evidence for molecular signatures of RA and RA subclasses, sets of new candidate genes as well as for candidate gene networks, which extend our understanding of disease mechanisms and may lead to an improved diagnosis.


PeerJ ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 7 ◽  
pp. e7491 ◽  
Author(s):  
Haibin Zhang ◽  
Cheng Chen ◽  
Yinghong Cui ◽  
Yuqing Li ◽  
Zhaojun Wang ◽  
...  

Osteoarthritis (OA) is the most common motor system disease in aging people, characterized by matrix degradation, chondrocyte death, and osteophyte formation. OA etiology is unclear, but long noncoding RNAs (lncRNAs) that participate in numerous pathological and physiological processes may be key regulators in the onset and development of OA. Because profiling of lncRNAs and their biological function in OA is not understood, we measured lncRNA and mRNA expression profiles using high-throughput microarray to study human knee OA. We identified 2,042 lncRNAs and 2,011 mRNAs that were significantly differentially expressed in OA compared to non-OA tissue (>2.0- or < − 2.0-fold change; p < 0.5), including 1,137 lncRNAs that were upregulated and 905 lncRNAs that were downregulated. Also, 1,386 mRNA were upregulated and 625 mRNAs were downregulated. QPCR was used to validate chip results. Gene Ontology analysis and the Kyoto Encyclopedia of Genes and Genomes was used to study the biological function enrichment of differentially expressed mRNA. Additionally, coding-non-coding gene co-expression (CNC) network construction was performed to explore the relevance of dysregulated lncRNAs and mRNAs. Finally, the gain/loss of function experiments of lnc-SAMD14-4 was implemented in IL-1β-treated human chondrocytes. In general, this study provides a preliminary database for further exploring lncRNA-related mechnisms in OA.


2020 ◽  
pp. 1-9
Author(s):  
Jereme B. Outerleys ◽  
Michael J. Dunbar ◽  
Glen Richardson ◽  
Cheryl L. Hubley-Kozey ◽  
Janie L. Astephen Wilson

Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) surgery improves knee joint kinematics and kinetics during gait for most patients, but a lack of evidence exists for the level and incidence of improvement that is achieved. The objective of this study was to quantify patient-specific improvements in knee biomechanics relative to osteoarthritis (OA) severity levels. Seventy-two patients underwent 3-dimensional (3D) gait analysis before and 1 year after TKA surgery, as well as 72 asymptomatic adults and 72 with moderate knee OA. A combination of principal component analysis and discriminant analyses were used to categorize knee joint biomechanics for patients before and after surgery relative to asymptomatic, moderate, and severe OA. Post-TKA, 63% were categorized with knee biomechanics consistent with moderate OA, 29% with severe OA, and 8% asymptomatic. The magnitude and pattern of the knee adduction moment and angle (frontal plane features) were the most significant contributors in discriminating between pre-TKA and post-TKA knee biomechanics. Standard of care TKA improves knee biomechanics during gait to levels most consistent with moderate knee OA and predominately targets frontal plane features. These results provide evidence for the level of improvement in knee biomechanics that can be expected following surgery and highlight the biomechanics most targeted by surgery.


2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (9) ◽  
pp. 231-246 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohit Bhandari ◽  
Raveendhara R. Bannuru ◽  
Eric M. Babins ◽  
Johanne Martel-Pelletier ◽  
Moin Khan ◽  
...  

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a chronic condition characterized by a loss of joint cartilage and is a major cause of disability in Canada, with an estimated CN$195 billion annual cost. Knee OA leads to persistent pain and loss of function, and treatment goals primarily focus on symptom relief and retention of function. Intra-articular hyaluronic acid (IAHA) has therapeutic benefits, and numerous recently published meta-analyses (MAs) and commentaries have highlighted new evidence on the role of IAHA therapy for knee OA. A diverse, multidisciplinary group of specialists met independently in closed sessions to review findings from eight MAs with literature search end dates no earlier than 2012 to address controversies surrounding IAHA therapy for mild-to-moderate knee OA within the Canadian treatment context. Outcomes from a total of eight MAs were reviewed, and consistent and statistically significant improvements in pain, function and stiffness up to 26 weeks were found with IAHA therapy compared with IA placebo or controls, regardless of MA size or trial quality. These findings are in line with those of a Cochrane review, another recent systematic review and patient satisfaction survey. Overall, three MAs reported outcomes based on molecular weight (MW), with the two reporting effect sizes showing significantly improved pain outcomes for higher compared with lower MW HAs. Recent evidence suggests that HA therapy is well tolerated with no increased risk of serious adverse events compared with placebo and the full therapeutic effect of IAHA therapy appears to have considerable clinical importance, consisting of the combined IA placebo and HA therapeutic effects. IAHA therapy is a well-tolerated and effective option for patients with mild-to-moderate knee OA failing first-line pharmacological therapy.


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