4.3 Article

Multi-day monitoring of foot progression angles during unsupervised, real-world walking in people with and without knee osteoarthritis

Journal

CLINICAL BIOMECHANICS
Volume 105, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2023.105957

Keywords

Wearable sensors; Gait; Knee osteoarthritis; Real-world

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study provides the first characterization of foot progression angles during real-world walking in people with and without symptomatic knee osteoarthritis. These results indicate that foot progression angles can be feasibly and reliably measured in unsupervised real-world walking conditions.
Background: Foot progression angle is a biomechanical target in gait modification interventions for knee oste-oarthritis. To date, it has only been evaluated within laboratory settings.Methods: Adults with symptomatic knee osteoarthritis (n = 30) and healthy adults (n = 15) completed two conditions: 1) treadmill walking in the laboratory (5-min), and 2) real-world walking outside of the laboratory (1-week). Foot progression angle was estimated via shoe-embedded inertial sensing. We calculated the foot progression angle magnitude (median) and variability (interquartile range, coefficient of variation), and used mixed models to compare outcomes between the conditions, participant groups, and disease severities. Reli-ability was quantified by the intraclass correlation coefficient, standardized error of the measurement, and the minimum detectable change.Findings: Foot progression angle magnitude did not differ between groups or conditions but variability signifi-cantly higher in real-world walking (P < 0.001). Structural and symptomatic severity were unrelated to FPA in either walking condition, except for real-world coefficient of variation which was higher for moderate-severe structural osteoarthritis compared to the treadmill for those with mild structural severity (P < 0.034). All real-world outcomes showed excellent reliability including intraclass correlation coefficients above 0.95. The participants recorded a mean (standard deviation) of 298 (33) and 10,447 (5232) steps in the laboratory and real-world walking conditions, respectively.Interpretation: This study provides the first characterization of foot progression angles during real-world walking in people with and without symptomatic knee osteoarthritis. These results indicate that foot progression angles can be feasibly and reliably measured in unsupervised real-world walking conditions.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.3
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available