Objective: To report whether changes in knee joint movement parameters recorded during functional activities relate to change in activity limitation or pain after an exercise intervention in people with knee osteoarthritis (OA).
Design: Etiology systematic review.
Literature Search: Four databases (MEDLINE, Embase, CINAHL, and AMED) were searched up to January 22, 2021.
Study Selection Criteria: Randomized controlled trials or cohort studies of exercise interventions for people with knee OA that assessed change in knee joint movement parameters (moments, kinematics, or muscle activity) and clinical outcomes (activity limitation or pain).
Data Synthesis: A descriptive synthesis of functional activities, movement parameters, and clinical outcomes.
Results: From 3182 articles, 22 studies met the inclusion criteria, and almost all were of low quality. Gait was the only investigated functional activity. After exercise, gait parameters changed 26% of the time, and clinical outcomes improved 90% of the time. A relationship between group-level changes in gait parameters and clinical outcomes occurred 24.5% of the time. Two studies directly investigated an individual-level relationship, reporting only 1 significant association out of 8 correlations tested.
Conclusion: Most studies reported no change in gait-related movement parameters despite improvement in clinical outcomes, challenging the belief that changing movement parameters is always clinically important in people with knee OA. .
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http://dx.doi.org/10.2519/jospt.2021.10418 | DOI Listing |
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