The effect of knee braces on knee joint kinematics at different exercise speeds.

Sports Biomech

Key Laboratory of Exercise and Health Sciences of Ministry of Education, Shanghai University of Sport, Shanghai, China.

Published: October 2024

This study aims to investigate the influence of a new semi-rigid knee joint braces on kinematics using the Opti-knee knee joint kinematic analysis system at various exercise speeds. Twenty-four healthy young male adults were recruited for this study. Participants were randomly assessed while wearing and not wearing knee brace at four different speeds on a treadmill: normal walking (3.6 km/h), brisk walking (5.4 km/h), jogging (9 km/h), and moderate intensity running (10.8 km/h). Six degrees of freedom kinematic data from the knee joint were collected. Paired t-tests were conducted to calculate the kinematic differences. At speeds of 3.6 km/h and 5.4 km/h, wearing the knee brace led to reduced knee joint mobility in anterior-posterior translation, superior-inferior translation, internal-external rotation, and flexion-extension angles during the stance phase ( < 0.05). At 9 km/h, wearing the brace reduced knee joint internal-external rotation and flexion-extension mobility during the stance phase ( < 0.05). At 10.8 km/h, wearing the brace reduced knee joint flexion-extension mobility during the stance phase ( < 0.05). Wearing brace has significant influence on knee kinematics at four speeds, and the effect of brace varies with the speed of movement.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14763141.2024.2409656DOI Listing

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