Abstract
Valgus knee unloader braces are often prescribed as treatment for knee osteoarthritis (OA). These braces are designed to redistribute the loading in the knee, thereby reducing medial contact forces. Patient response to bracing is variable; some patients experience improvements in joint loading, pain, and function, others see little to no effect. We hypothesised that patients who experienced beneficial response to the brace, measured by reductions in medial contact force, could be predicted based on static and dynamic measures.
Participants completed a WOMAC questionnaire and walked overground with and without an OA Assist knee brace in a motion capture lab. Eighteen patients with medial compartment OA (8 female, 53.8±7.0 years, BMI 30.3±4.1, median Kellgren-Lawrence grade 4 (range 1–4)) were evaluated. The abduction moment applied by the brace was estimated by multiplying brace deflection by the pre-determined brace stiffness. A generic musculoskeletal model was scaled for each participant based on standing full length radiographs and anatomical markers. Inverse kinematics, inverse dynamics, residual reduction, and muscle analysis were completed in OpenSim 3.2. A static optimisation was then performed to estimate muscle forces and then tibiofemoral contact forces were calculated. Brace effectiveness was defined by the difference in the first peak of the medial contact force between braced and unbraced conditions. Principal component analysis was performed on the hip, knee, and ankle angles and moments from the unbraced walking condition to extract the principal component (PC) scores for these variables. A linear regression procedure was used to determine which variables related to brace effectiveness. Potential regressors included: hip-knee-ankle angle and medial joint space measured radiographically; KL grade; mass; WOMAC scores; unbraced walking speed; and the first two principal component scores for each of the unbraced hip, knee, and ankle joint angles and moments.
KL grade, walking speed, and hip adduction moment PC1, which represented the magnitude of the first peak were all found to be correlated with change in medial contact force. The brace was more successful in reducing medial contact force in subjects with higher KL grades, faster self-selected walking speeds, and larger peak external hip adduction moments. The R2 value for the overall regression model was 0.78.
The best predictor of brace effectiveness was the hip adduction moment, indicating the need to consider dynamic measures. Participants who had hip adduction moments and walking speeds similar to those of their healthy counterparts saw a greater reduction in medial contact force. Thus, those who responded to bracing had more severe OA as measured by the KL grade but had not experienced changes in their hip adduction moment due to OA. The results of this study suggest that there is potential for an objective criterion for valgus knee brace use to be established.