1. Cumulative loading increases and loading asymmetries persist during walking for people with a transfemoral bone-anchored limb.
- Author
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Thomsen PB, Gaffney BMM, Tracy JB, Vandenberg NW, Awad ME, Christiansen CL, and Stoneback JW
- Subjects
- Humans, Middle Aged, Male, Female, Retrospective Studies, Adult, Bone-Anchored Prosthesis, Weight-Bearing physiology, Femur surgery, Hip Joint physiology, Biomechanical Phenomena, Amputation, Surgical rehabilitation, Amputees rehabilitation, Prosthesis Design, Walking physiology, Artificial Limbs
- Abstract
Background: A bone-anchored limb (BAL) is an alternative to a traditional socket-type prosthesis for people with transfemoral amputation. Early laboratory-based evidence suggests improvement in joint and limb loading mechanics during walking with a BAL compared to socket prosthesis use. However, changes in cumulative joint and limb loading measures, which may be predictive of degenerative joint disease progression, remain unknown., Research Question: Do cumulative total limb and hip joint loading during walking change using a BAL for people with unilateral transfemoral amputation, compared to prior socket prosthesis use?, Methods: A case-series cohort of eight participants with prior unilateral transfemoral amputation who underwent BAL hardware implantation surgery were retrospectively analyzed (4 M/4 F; BMI: 27.7 ± 3.1 kg/m
2 ; age: 50.4 ± 10.2 years). Daily step count and whole-body motion capture data were collected before (using socket prosthesis) and one-year after BAL hardware implantation. Cumulative total limb and hip joint loading and between-limb loading symmetry metrics were calculated during overground walking at both time points and compared using Cohen's d effect sizes., Results: One year after BAL hardware implantation, participants demonstrated bilateral increases in cumulative total limb loading (amputated: d = -0.65; intact: d = -0.72) and frontal-plane hip moment (amputated: d = -1.29; intact: d = -1.68). Total limb loading and hip joint loading in all planes remained asymmetric over time, with relative overloading of the intact limb in all variables of interest at the one-year point., Significance: Despite increases in cumulative total limb and hip joint loading, between-limb loading asymmetries persist. Habitual loading asymmetry has been implicated in contributing to negative long-term joint health and onset or progression of degenerative joint diseases. Improved understanding of methods to address habitual loading asymmetries is needed to optimize rehabilitation and long-term joint health as people with transfemoral amputation increase physical activity when using a BAL., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known conflicting financial or personal interests that could have appeared to inappropriately influence the results presented in this work., (Published by Elsevier B.V.)- Published
- 2024
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