Association of walking cadence to changes in knee pain and physical function: The multicenter osteoarthritis study

IF 2.8
Khara A. James , Tuhina Neogi , David T. Felson , Patrick Corrigan , Cara L. Lewis , Irene S. Davis , Kathryn L. Bacon , James C. Torner , Cora E. Lewis , Michael C. Nevitt , Joshua J. Stefanik
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Objective

Determine the association of walking cadence to incident and worsening knee pain and physical function over 2 years in adults with or at risk for knee OA.

Design

Participants from the Multicenter Osteoarthritis study were included.
Cadence was measured using a GAITRite walkway. Incident and worsening knee symptoms, pain with walking, and functional limitations were assessed at baseline and 2 years later. The association of cadence to each outcome was analyzed using log binomial regression. Cadence was assessed continuously as a 10-unit change and categorically using quartiles. Analyses were adjusted for age, sex, race, BMI, presence of tibiofemoral OA, depression, and history of knee injury. Sensitivity analyses were conducted for all outcomes adjusted for gait speed and stratified by sex.

Results

Among 1600 participants (60.3 ​% female, age 67.1 ​± ​7.7 years), lower cadence was not significantly associated with incident or worsening knee symptoms, pain with walking, or functional limitations. For every 10-step/min decrease in cadence, the risk of incident knee symptoms increased by 10 ​% (RR ​= ​1.10, 95%CI [0.97, 1.25]), though this was not statistically significant and was attenuated after adjusting for gait speed (RR ​= ​0.95, 95%CI [0.80, 1.12]). No significant associations were observed for incident or worsening pain with walking or functional limitations. Sex-stratified analyses revealed inconsistent findings, including an increased risk for incident functional limitations in females (RR ​= ​1.45, 95%CI [1.02, 2.08]), which was attenuated after adjusting for gait speed.

Conclusion

Lower cadence was not significantly associated with pain and function, suggesting that the interplay between cadence, gait speed, and clinical outcomes warrants further investigation.
步行节奏与膝关节疼痛和身体功能变化的关系:多中心骨关节炎研究
目的:确定2年以上患有或有患膝关节炎风险的成年人行走节奏与发生和恶化的膝关节疼痛和身体功能的关系。设计纳入多中心骨关节炎研究的参与者。使用GAITRite步道测量节奏。在基线和2年后评估突发和恶化的膝关节症状、行走时疼痛和功能限制。使用对数二项回归分析节奏与各结果的关联。节奏被连续评估为10个单位的变化,并分类使用四分位数。分析调整了年龄、性别、种族、BMI、胫骨股骨骨关节炎、抑郁症和膝关节损伤史。对所有经步态速度调整并按性别分层的结果进行敏感性分析。结果在1600名参与者中(60.3%为女性,年龄67.1±7.7岁),较低的节奏与膝盖症状的发生或恶化、行走疼痛或功能限制没有显著相关。步频每降低10步/分钟,发生膝关节症状的风险增加10% (RR = 1.10, 95%CI[0.97, 1.25]),但这没有统计学意义,并且在调整步速后有所减弱(RR = 0.95, 95%CI[0.80, 1.12])。没有观察到与行走或功能限制有关的疼痛的发生或恶化。性别分层分析显示了不一致的结果,包括女性发生意外功能限制的风险增加(RR = 1.45, 95%CI[1.02, 2.08]),在调整步态速度后降低。结论低步速与疼痛和功能无显著相关性,表明步速、步速和临床结果之间的相互作用值得进一步研究。
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
Osteoarthritis and cartilage open
Osteoarthritis and cartilage open Orthopedics, Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation
CiteScore
3.30
自引率
0.00%
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