Publication date: November 2019
Source: Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Volume 100, Issue 11
Author(s): Hiroshige Tateuchi, Haruhiko Akiyama, Koji Goto, Kazutaka So, Yutaka Kuroda, Noriaki Ichihashi
Abstract
Objective
To identify gait- and posture-related factors associated with changes in hip pain and physical function in patients with hip osteoarthritis (OA).
Design
Prospective cohort study.
Setting
Clinical biomechanics laboratory of a university.
Participants
Consecutive sampling of female patients with mild-to-moderate secondary hip OA (N=30).
Main Outcome Measures
Hip pain (visual analog scale) and physical function (physical component summary of the Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey) were measured at baseline and 12 months later. With changes in hip pain and physical function as dependent variables, linear regression analyses were performed with gait- and posture-related factors as independent variables with and without adjustment for age, joint space width, and hip pain or physical function at baseline. Posture-related factors included angles of thoracic kyphosis, lumbar lordosis, sacral inclination, spinal inclination, and spinal mobility. Gait-related factors were walking speed, steps per day, joint angles, external hip joint moment impulses, and daily cumulative hip moments.
Results
Multiple linear regression analyses showed that limited hip extension (adjusted standardized B coefficient [95% confidence interval]: −0.52 [−0.88 to −0.17]) and limited external rotation angles (−0.51 [−0.85 to −0.18]) during walking were associated with the worsening of hip pain. An increased thoracic kyphosis (−0.54 [−0.99 to −0.09]), less sacral anterior tilt (0.40 [0.01-0.79]), reduced thoracic spine mobility (0.59 [0.23-0.94]), less steps per day (0.53 [0.13-0.92]), and a slower walking speed (0.45 [0.04-0.86]) were associated with deterioration in physical function.
Conclusions
Gait- and posture-related factors should be considered when assessing risk and designing preventive interventions for the clinical progression of secondary hip OA.
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