1. Total ankle arthroplasty improves discrete and continuous stance phase gait symmetry.
- Author
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Kugach, Kelly, Stark, Nicole E.-P., Farah, Hassan-Galaydh, Hansen, Robyn M., Arena, Sara L., and Queen, Robin M.
- Subjects
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TOTAL ankle replacement , *GAIT disorders , *PROPULSION systems , *PLANTARFLEXION , *ARTHRITIS - Abstract
Total ankle arthroplasty (TAA) is used to treat symptomatic end-stage ankle arthritis (AA). However, little is known about TAA's effects on gait symmetry. Determine if symmetry changes from before surgery through two years following TAA utilizing the normalized symmetry index (NSI) and statistical parametric mapping (SPM). 141 patients with end-stage unilateral AA were evaluated from a previously collected prospective database, where each participant was tested within two weeks of surgery (Pre-Op), one year and two years following TAA. Walking speed, hip extension angle and moment, hip flexion angle, ankle plantarflexion angle and moment, ankle dorsiflexion angle, weight acceptance (GRF1), and propulsive (GRF2) vertical ground reaction forces were calculated for each limb. Gait symmetry was assessed using the NSI. A linear mixed effects model with a single response for each gait symmetry variable was used to examine the fixed effect of follow-up time (Pre-Op, Post-1 yr, Post-2 yr) and the random effect of participant with gait speed as a covariate in the model. A one-dimensional repeated measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) statistical parameter mapping (SPM) was completed to examine differences in the time-series NSI to determine regions of significant differences between follow-up times. Relative to Pre-Op values, GRF1, and GRF2 showed increased symmetry for discrete metrics and the time-series NSI across sessions. Hip extension moment had the largest symmetry improvement. Ankle plantarflexion angle was different between Pre-Op and Post-2 yr (p=0.010); and plantarflexion moment was different between Pre- Op and each post-operative session (p<0.001). The time-series Ankle Angle NSI was greater during the early stance phase in the Pre-Op session compared to Post-2 yr. Symmetry across most of the stance phase improved following TAA indicating that TAA successfully improves gait symmetry and future work should determine if these improvements restore symmetry to levels equivalent with health age-match controls. • At Post-1 yr and −2 yr, TAA patients have improved gait symmetry and gait speed. • Peak vertical GRF and Ankle plantarflexion moment symmetry improve following TAA. • Gait symmetry improves throughout most of the stance phase of gait after TAA. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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