Novel arthrometer for quantitative clinical examination of the knee in three planes: Safety, reliability, minimum detectable changes, and side-to-side differences in healthy subjects. Academic Article uri icon

Overview

abstract

  • Physical examination of the knee joint is used to diagnose the type and severity of knee ligament injury; however, these exams are qualitative and subjective. To perform common physical examinations, we developed an arthrometer which quantitatively measures the load-displacement response in anterior-posterior (AP) translation, internal-external rotation (IER) and varus-valgus (VV) rotation. Here we describe safety, reliability, minimum detectable changes (MDCs), and absolute side-to-side differences in twenty young, healthy subjects (ten male, ten female, mean age: 28 ± 6 years). The arthrometer consists of an instrumented mechanical linkage, a force-moment sensor, and software for real-time visualization and recording of the load-displacement responses. During testing, the subject sits reclined in a chair with their knee fixed at 30° of flexion. Two examiners tested both knees of each subject twice to assess reliability via intraclass correlation coefficients (ICC). All subjects completed the test protocol with minimal pain and stated that they would volunteer to be tested again. Each knee required on average five minutes to test. All intra-test reliabilities were excellent (≥0.91). Intra-examiner reliabilities ranged from good to excellent (0.62-0.89), and inter-examiner reliabilities were good to excellent (≥0.72). MDCs for repeat measures were ≤ 4.5 mm, 4.6°, and 2.3° for AP, IER, and VV, respectively. The absolute side-to-side differences for this cohort averaged 3.8 mm in AP, 5.5° in IER, and 2.2° in VV. Our arthrometer was safe, testing was time-efficient, and MDCs in our cohort of healthy subjects support utilization of this device for clinical research.

authors

  • Imhauser, Carl W.
  • Berube, Erin E
  • Oladimeji, Akinola Emmanuel
  • Shamritsky, David Z
  • Zayyad, Zaid A
  • Fraychineaud, Thomas J
  • Vazquez, Jennifer T
  • Jahandar, Hamidreza
  • Lyman, Stephen
  • Parides, Michael K
  • Jones, Debi
  • Chiaia, Theresa A
  • Pearle, Andrew D
  • Nawabi, Danyal H
  • Wickiewicz, Thomas L

publication date

  • September 21, 2024

Research

keywords

  • Knee Joint

Identity

Scopus Document Identifier

  • 85205737876

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)

  • 10.1016/j.jbiomech.2024.112330

PubMed ID

  • 39388887

Additional Document Info

volume

  • 176