Sex Differences in Ambulatory Biomechanics: A Meta-Analysis Providinga Mechanistic Insight into Knee Osteoarthritis.

IF 4.1 2区 医学 Q1 SPORT SCIENCES
Momoko Yamagata, Tetsuya Kimura, Alison H Chang, Hirotaka Iijima
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose: Females typically present with a higher prevalence of knee osteoarthritis (KOA), and such a higher prevalence may be due to unique knee biomechanics during walking. However, the sex-dependent ambulatory mechanics has been yet to be clarified. To address this critical knowledge gap, this study implemented a series of computational approaches (1) to identify sex-related knee joint biomechanics during ambulation in persons with KOA and (2) to compare these biomechanical measures between individuals with vs. without KOA, stratified by sex.

Methods: We searched five electronic databases for studies reporting sex-specific knee biomechanics in persons with and/or without KOA. Summary estimates were computed using random-effects meta-analysis and stratified by sex.

Results: The systematic review identified eighteen studies (308 males and 383 females with KOA; 740 males and 995 females without KOA). A series of meta-analyses identified female-specific knee biomechanics in a disease-dependent manner. Females with KOA had lower first peak knee adduction moment and peak knee adduction compared to male counterparts. On the other hand, healthy females had lower peak knee flexion moment than male counterparts. Effect estimate in each meta-analysis display poor quality of evidence according to the GRADE approach.

Conclusions: The current study is the first to consider sex as a biological variable into ambulatory mechanics in the development of KOA. We discovered that sex-dependent alterations in knee biomechanics is a function of the presence of KOA, indicating that KOA disease may be a driver of the sex-dependent biomechanical alterations or vice versa. Although no strong conclusion can be drawn because of the low quality of evidence, these findings provide new insight into the sex differences in ambulatory knee biomechanics and progression of KOA.

活动生物力学中的性别差异:提供膝关节骨性关节炎机理见解的元分析
目的:女性膝关节骨性关节炎(KOA)的发病率通常较高,这种较高的发病率可能是由于女性在行走过程中独特的膝关节生物力学所致。然而,与性别相关的行走力学尚未明确。为了填补这一重要的知识空白,本研究采用了一系列计算方法:(1)确定KOA患者在行走过程中与性别相关的膝关节生物力学;(2)比较KOA患者与非KOA患者之间按性别分层的生物力学测量结果:我们在五个电子数据库中搜索了报告 KOA 患者和/或无 KOA 患者膝关节生物力学性别特异性的研究。我们使用随机效应荟萃分析法计算了汇总估算值,并按性别进行了分层:系统综述确定了 18 项研究(308 名男性和 383 名女性患有 KOA;740 名男性和 995 名女性未患 KOA)。一系列荟萃分析以疾病依赖的方式确定了女性特有的膝关节生物力学。与男性患者相比,患有KOA的女性膝关节内收第一峰值力矩和膝关节内收峰值都较低。另一方面,健康女性的膝关节屈曲峰值力矩低于男性。根据 GRADE 方法,每项荟萃分析的效应估计值显示证据质量较差:目前的研究首次将性别作为KOA发病过程中的一个生物变量。我们发现,膝关节生物力学的性别依赖性改变是 KOA 存在的一个函数,这表明 KOA 疾病可能是性别依赖性生物力学改变的一个驱动因素,反之亦然。虽然由于证据质量不高而无法得出有力的结论,但这些发现为人们了解活动膝关节生物力学的性别差异和 KOA 的进展提供了新的视角。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.70
自引率
4.90%
发文量
2568
审稿时长
1 months
期刊介绍: Medicine & Science in Sports & Exercise® features original investigations, clinical studies, and comprehensive reviews on current topics in sports medicine and exercise science. With this leading multidisciplinary journal, exercise physiologists, physiatrists, physical therapists, team physicians, and athletic trainers get a vital exchange of information from basic and applied science, medicine, education, and allied health fields.
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