Extra excitation of biceps femoris during neuromuscular electrical stimulation reduces knee medial loading

Medial knee joint osteoarthritis (OA) is a debilitating and prevalent condition. Surgical treatment consists of redistributing the forces from the medial to the lateral compartment through osteotomy, or replacing the joint surfaces. As the mediolateral load distribution is related to the action of t...

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Main Authors: Rui Xu, Dong Ming, Ziyun Ding, Anthony M. J. Bull
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: The Royal Society 2019-03-01
Series:Royal Society Open Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.181545
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spelling doaj-938c0a644763437fb4c59c809aee56c72020-11-25T04:02:08ZengThe Royal SocietyRoyal Society Open Science2054-57032019-03-016310.1098/rsos.181545181545Extra excitation of biceps femoris during neuromuscular electrical stimulation reduces knee medial loadingRui XuDong MingZiyun DingAnthony M. J. BullMedial knee joint osteoarthritis (OA) is a debilitating and prevalent condition. Surgical treatment consists of redistributing the forces from the medial to the lateral compartment through osteotomy, or replacing the joint surfaces. As the mediolateral load distribution is related to the action of the musculature around the knee, the aim of this study was to devise a technique to redistribute these forces non-surgically through changes in muscle excitation. Eight healthy subjects participated in the experiment, and neuromuscular electrical stimulation was used to change the muscle forces around the knee. A musculoskeletal model was used to quantify the loading on the medial compartment of the knee, and a novel algorithm devised and implemented to simulate neuromuscular electrical stimulation. The forces and moments at the knee, ground reaction forces, walking velocity and step length were quantified before and after stimulation. Stimulation of the biceps femoris resulted in a significant decrease in the second peak of the medial knee joint loading by up to 0.17 body weight (p = 0.016). Kinematic parameters were not significantly affected. Neuromuscular electrical stimulation can decrease the peak loads on the medial compartment of the knee, and thus offers a promising therapy for medial knee joint OA.https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.181545knee adduction momentknee medial loadingmusculoskeletal modellingneuromuscular electrical stimulation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rui Xu
Dong Ming
Ziyun Ding
Anthony M. J. Bull
spellingShingle Rui Xu
Dong Ming
Ziyun Ding
Anthony M. J. Bull
Extra excitation of biceps femoris during neuromuscular electrical stimulation reduces knee medial loading
Royal Society Open Science
knee adduction moment
knee medial loading
musculoskeletal modelling
neuromuscular electrical stimulation
author_facet Rui Xu
Dong Ming
Ziyun Ding
Anthony M. J. Bull
author_sort Rui Xu
title Extra excitation of biceps femoris during neuromuscular electrical stimulation reduces knee medial loading
title_short Extra excitation of biceps femoris during neuromuscular electrical stimulation reduces knee medial loading
title_full Extra excitation of biceps femoris during neuromuscular electrical stimulation reduces knee medial loading
title_fullStr Extra excitation of biceps femoris during neuromuscular electrical stimulation reduces knee medial loading
title_full_unstemmed Extra excitation of biceps femoris during neuromuscular electrical stimulation reduces knee medial loading
title_sort extra excitation of biceps femoris during neuromuscular electrical stimulation reduces knee medial loading
publisher The Royal Society
series Royal Society Open Science
issn 2054-5703
publishDate 2019-03-01
description Medial knee joint osteoarthritis (OA) is a debilitating and prevalent condition. Surgical treatment consists of redistributing the forces from the medial to the lateral compartment through osteotomy, or replacing the joint surfaces. As the mediolateral load distribution is related to the action of the musculature around the knee, the aim of this study was to devise a technique to redistribute these forces non-surgically through changes in muscle excitation. Eight healthy subjects participated in the experiment, and neuromuscular electrical stimulation was used to change the muscle forces around the knee. A musculoskeletal model was used to quantify the loading on the medial compartment of the knee, and a novel algorithm devised and implemented to simulate neuromuscular electrical stimulation. The forces and moments at the knee, ground reaction forces, walking velocity and step length were quantified before and after stimulation. Stimulation of the biceps femoris resulted in a significant decrease in the second peak of the medial knee joint loading by up to 0.17 body weight (p = 0.016). Kinematic parameters were not significantly affected. Neuromuscular electrical stimulation can decrease the peak loads on the medial compartment of the knee, and thus offers a promising therapy for medial knee joint OA.
topic knee adduction moment
knee medial loading
musculoskeletal modelling
neuromuscular electrical stimulation
url https://royalsocietypublishing.org/doi/pdf/10.1098/rsos.181545
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AT ziyunding extraexcitationofbicepsfemorisduringneuromuscularelectricalstimulationreduceskneemedialloading
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