1,059 research outputs found

    The influence of lower limb biomechanics on the development, persistence and management of patellofemoral pain in recreational runners

    Get PDF
    PhDBackground Patellofemoral pain (PFP) is a common complaint characterised by diffuse retropatellar or peripatellar pain during activities such as running, stair descent or squatting. We aimed to determine the influence of lower limb biomechanics on the development, persistence and management of PFP in recreational runners. Methods Two systematic reviews with meta-analysis explored risk factors for, and the associations between, PFP and lower limb biomechanics respectively. A case-control study investigated lower limb kinematics during treadmill running and a feasibility study explored recruitment, retention and delivery of a step rate intervention in mixed-sex runners. Finally, a validity study investigated the potential for two-dimensional (2D) video to predict three-dimensional (3D) running kinematics. Results Understanding of which variables contribute to PFP development is inadequate, requiring further exploration. Multiple retrospective associations between and potential treatment mechanisms for lower limb biomechanics and PFP were identified, but prospective data is lacking. A mixed-sex cohort of runners demonstrated higher peak hip adduction compared to controls. Higher peak hip adduction was also observed when comparing females with PFP to controls, but data for males were non-significant. Recruitment and retention of a mixed-sex cohort of runners with PFP to a step rate intervention was feasible. Clinically relevant changes in pain and potential kinematic treatment mechanisms were identified post-retraining, though these mechanisms were not detectable with 2D video. Conclusion Potential influences of lower limb biomechanics once a recreational runner has PFP are well established. Further work is required to determine what biomechanical variables may contribute to PFP development, with novel approaches required. Sex influences lower limb kinematics and as such, males and females may have different symptom drivers requiring individual treatment strategies. Step rate retraining demonstrated potential efficacy and treatment mechanisms that warrant further appraisal in an adequately powered randomised controlled trial to long-term follow up

    Increased hip adduction during running is associated with patellofemoral pain and differs between males and females: A case-control study.

    Get PDF
    Patellofemoral pain is common amongst recreational runners and associated with altered running kinematics. However, it is currently unclear how sex may influence kinematic differences previously reported in runners with patellofemoral pain. This case-control study aimed to evaluate lower limb kinematics in males and females with and without patellofemoral pain during running. Lower limb 3D kinematics were assessed in 20 runners with patellofemoral pain (11 females, 9 males) and 20 asymptomatic runners (11 females, 9 males) during a 3 km treadmill run. Variables of interest included peak hip adduction, internal rotation and flexion angles; and peak knee flexion angle, given their previously reported association with patellofemoral pain. Age, height, mass, weekly run distance and step rate were not significantly different between groups. Mixed-sex runners with patellofemoral pain were found to run with a significantly greater peak hip adduction angle (mean difference = 4.9°, d = 0.91, 95% CI 1.4-8.2, p = 0.01) when compared to matched controls, but analyses for all other kinematic variables were non-significant. Females with patellofemoral pain ran with a significantly greater peak hip adduction angle compared to female controls (mean difference = 6.6°, p = 0.02, F = 3.41, 95% CI 0.4-12.8). Analyses for all other kinematic variables between groups (males and females with/without PFP) were non-significant. Differences in peak hip adduction between those with and without patellofemoral pain during running appear to be driven by females. This potentially highlights different kinematic treatment targets between males and females. Future research is encouraged to report lower limb kinematic variables in runners with patellofemoral pain separately for males and females

    Risk factors for patellofemoral pain: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

    Get PDF
    “This article has been accepted for publication in British Journal of Sports Medicine 2019 following peer review, and the Version of Record can be accessed online at http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bjsports-2017-098890.”BACKGROUND: Patellofemoral pain (PFP) is a prevalent condition commencing at various points throughout life. We aimed to provide an evidence synthesis concerning predictive variables for PFP, to aid development of preventative interventions. METHODS: We searched Medline, Web of Science and SCOPUS until February 2017 for prospective studies investigating at least one potential risk factor for future PFP. Two independent reviewers appraised methodological quality using the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. We conducted meta-analysis where appropriate, with standardised mean differences (SMD) and risk ratios calculated for continuous and nominal scaled data. RESULTS: This review included 18 studies involving 4818 participants, of whom 483 developed PFP (heterogeneous incidence 10%). Three distinct subgroups (military recruits, adolescents and recreational runners) were identified. Strong to moderate evidence indicated that age, height, weight, body mass index (BMI), body fat and Q angle were not risk factors for future PFP. Moderate evidence indicated that quadriceps weakness was a risk factor for future PFP in the military, especially when normalised by BMI (SMD -0.69, CI -1.02, -0.35). Moderate evidence indicated that hip weakness was not a risk factor for future PFP (multiple pooled SMDs, range -0.09 to -0.20), but in adolescents, moderate evidence indicated that increased hip abduction strength was a risk factor for future PFP (SMD 0.71, CI 0.39, 1.04). CONCLUSIONS: This review identified multiple variables that did not predict future PFP, but quadriceps weakness in military recruits and higher hip strength in adolescents were risk factors for PFP. Identifying modifiable risk factors is an urgent priority to improve prevention and treatment outcomes

    Is markerless, smart phone recorded two-dimensional video a clinically useful measure of relevant lower limb kinematics in runners with patellofemoral pain? A validity and reliability study.

    Get PDF
    OBJECTIVES: Investigate the validity and reliability of markerless, smart phone collected, two-dimensional (2D) video, analysed using the 'Hudl technique' application, compared to three-dimensional (3D) kinematics during running, in participants with patellofemoral pain (PFP). DESIGN: Validity/reliability study. SETTING: Biomechanics laboratory. PARTICIPANTS: Males/females with PFP (n = 21, 10 males, 11 females, age 32.1 months [±12.9]). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Manually synchronised 2D and 3D measurement of peak hip adduction (HADD) and peak knee flexion (KFLEX) during running. RESULTS: 2D and 3D measures of peak KFLEX (p = 0.02, d = 1.13), but not peak HADD (p = 0.25, d = -0.27), differed significantly. Poor validity was identified for 2D measurement of peak HADD (ICC 0.06, 95% CI -0.35, 0.47) and peak KFLEX ICC 0.42, 95% CI (-0.10, 0.75). Moderate intra-rater reliability was identified for both variables (ICC 0.61-65), alongside moderate inter-rater reliability for peak KFLEX (ICC 0.71) and poor inter-rater reliability for peak HADD (ICC 0.31). CONCLUSIONS: Measurement of peak HADD and KFLEX in runners with PFP using markerless, smart phone collected 2D video, analysed using the Hudl technique Application is invalid, with poor to moderate reliability. Investigation of alternate 2D video approaches to increase precision is warranted. At present, 2D video analysis of running using Hudl Technique cannot be advocated

    The effects & mechanisms of increasing running step rate: A feasibility study in a mixed-sex group of runners with patellofemoral pain.

    Get PDF
    OBJECTIVES: To explore feasibility of recruitment and retention of runners with patellofemoral pain (PFP), before delivering a step rate intervention. DESIGN: Feasibility study. SETTING: Human performance laboratory. PARTICIPANTS: A mixed-sex sample of runners with PFP (n = 11). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Average/worst pain and the Kujala Scale were recorded pre/post intervention, alongside lower limb kinematics and surface electromyography (sEMG), sampled during a 3 KM treadmill run. RESULTS: Recruitment and retention of a mixed-sex cohort was successful, losing one participant to public healthcare and with kinematic and sEMG data lost from single participants only. Clinically meaningful reductions in average (MD = 2.1, d = 1.7) and worst pain (MD = 3.9, d = 2.0) were observed. Reductions in both peak knee flexion (MD = 3.7°, d = 0.78) and peak hip internal rotation (MD = 5.1°, d = 0.96) were observed, which may provide some mechanistic explanation for the identified effects. An increase in both mean amplitude (d = 0.53) and integral (d = 0.58) were observed for the Vastus Medialis Obliqus (VMO) muscle only, of questionable clinical relevance. CONCLUSIONS: Recruitment and retention of a mixed sex PFP cohort to a step rate intervention involving detailed biomechanical measures is feasible. There are indications of both likely efficacy and associated mechanisms. Future studies comparing the efficacy of different running retraining approaches are warranted

    Lumbar arthroplasty Preclinical and clinical experience with a viscoelastic total disc replacement

    Get PDF
    Abstract Background: The purpose of this study is to describe the mechanical durability and the clinical and radiographic outcomes of a viscoelastic total disc replacement (VTDR). The human intervertebral disc is a complex, viscoelastic structure, permitting and constraining motion in 3 axes, thus providing stability. The ideal disc replacement should be viscoelastic and deformable in all directions, and it should restore disc height and angle. Methods: Mechanical testing was conducted to validate the durability of the VTDR, and a clinical study was conducted to evaluate safety and performance. Fifty patients with single-level, symptomatic lumbar degenerative disc disease at L4-5 or L5-S1 were enrolled in a clinical trial at 3 European sites. Patients were assessed clinically and radiographically for 2 years by the Oswestry Disability Index (ODI), a visual analog scale (VAS), and independent radiographic analyses. Results: The VTDR showed a fatigue life in excess of 50 million cycles (50-year equivalent) and a physiologically appropriate level of stiffness, motion, geometry, and viscoelasticity. We enrolled 28 men and 22 women in the clinical study, with a mean age of 40 years. Independent quantitative radiographic assessment indicated that the VTDR restored and maintained disc height and lordosis while providing physiologic motion. Mean ODI scores decreased from 48% preoperatively to 23% at 2 years' follow-up. Mean VAS low-back pain scores decreased from 7.1 cm to 2.9 cm. Median scores indicated that half of the patient population had ODI scores below 10% and VAS low-back pain scores below 0.95 cm at 2 years. Conclusions: The VTDR has excellent durability and performs clinically and radiographically as intended for the treatment of symptomatic lumbar degenerative disc disease. Clinical Relevance: The VTDR is intended to restore healthy anatomic properties and stability characteristics to the spinal segment. This study is the first to evaluate a VTDR in a 50-patient, multicenter European study

    Star Formation in the Milky Way and Nearby Galaxies

    Full text link
    We review progress over the past decade in observations of large-scale star formation, with a focus on the interface between extragalactic and Galactic studies. Methods of measuring gas contents and star formation rates are discussed, and updated prescriptions for calculating star formation rates are provided. We review relations between star formation and gas on scales ranging from entire galaxies to individual molecular clouds.Comment: 55 pages, 15 figures, in press for Annual Reviews of Astronomy and Astrophysics; Updated with corrected equation 5, improved references, and other minor change

    The genomic evolution of human prostate cancer.

    Get PDF
    Prostate cancers are highly prevalent in the developed world, with inheritable risk contributing appreciably to tumour development. Genomic heterogeneity within individual prostate glands and between patients derives predominantly from structural variants and copy-number aberrations. Subtypes of prostate cancers are being delineated through the increasing use of next-generation sequencing, but these subtypes are yet to be used to guide the prognosis or therapeutic strategy. Herein, we review our current knowledge of the mutational landscape of human prostate cancer, describing what is known of the common mutations underpinning its development. We evaluate recurrent prostate-specific mutations prior to discussing the mutational events that are shared both in prostate cancer and across multiple cancer types. From these data, we construct a putative overview of the genomic evolution of human prostate cancer

    Haplotype inference in crossbred populations without pedigree information

    Get PDF
    <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Current methods for haplotype inference without pedigree information assume random mating populations. In animal and plant breeding, however, mating is often not random. A particular form of nonrandom mating occurs when parental individuals of opposite sex originate from distinct populations. In animal breeding this is called <it>crossbreeding </it>and <it>hybridization </it>in plant breeding. In these situations, association between marker and putative gene alleles might differ between the founding populations and origin of alleles should be accounted for in studies which estimate breeding values with marker data. The sequence of alleles from one parent constitutes one haplotype of an individual. Haplotypes thus reveal allele origin in data of crossbred individuals.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>We introduce a new method for haplotype inference without pedigree that allows nonrandom mating and that can use genotype data of the parental populations and of a crossbred population. The aim of the method is to estimate line origin of alleles. The method has a Bayesian set up with a Dirichlet Process as prior for the haplotypes in the two parental populations. The basic idea is that only a subset of the complete set of possible haplotypes is present in the population.</p> <p>Conclusion</p> <p>Line origin of approximately 95% of the alleles at heterozygous sites was assessed correctly in both simulated and real data. Comparing accuracy of haplotype frequencies inferred with the new algorithm to the accuracy of haplotype frequencies inferred with PHASE, an existing algorithm for haplotype inference, showed that the DP algorithm outperformed PHASE in situations of crossbreeding and that PHASE performed better in situations of random mating.</p
    • …
    corecore