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Investigation of The Effects of Prosthetic Knee Condition for Individuals with Transfemoral Amputation During Attempted Running. Can Prosthet Orthot J 2020;3(2):34481

Date

09/16/2020

Pubmed ID

37614405

Pubmed Central ID

PMC10443485

DOI

10.33137/cpoj.v3i2.34481

Scopus ID

2-s2.0-85103495919 (requires institutional sign-in at Scopus site)

Abstract

BACKGROUND: A number of individuals with unilateral transfemoral amputation (TFA) run in a prosthesis with an unlocked prosthetic knee, while others choose to run with a locked prosthetic knee to increase stability. Research regarding running with an unlocked knee (UK) versus a locked knee (LK), with respect to energy efficiency, is limited and might be enhanced by characterization of the impact of knee condition on kinematics.

OBJECTIVES: To investigate the effect of an UK versus LK on hip kinematics, energy efficiency, and running speed.

METHODOLOGY: Five male novice runners with unilateral TFA completed one three-minute self-selected running speed (SSRS) trial and three peak speed trials per knee condition. Hip kinematics, energy efficiency, and running speed were compared between conditions.

FINDINGS: Four of the five subjects exhibited a fast walk, rather than a consistent run. Hip flexion increased for all subjects and hip abduction decreased for four subjects during swing phase for the UK condition. Hip kinematic asymmetry was reduced for the UK condition in the sagittal plane for four individuals; hip kinematic asymmetry was also reduced in the frontal plane for the UK condition for three of these individuals. Mean energy efficiency was better for the UK condition (UK: 0.282 mLO2/kg/m, LK: 0.328 mLO2/kg/m). Peak running speed did not differ significantly between knee conditions (UK: 1.47m/s, LK:1.32m/s).

CONCLUSIONS: For novice recreational runners with unilateral transfemoral amputation, the UK condition resulted in improved energy efficiency and enhanced kinematic symmetry, despite comparable peak speed relative to the LK condition. Therefore the UK condition may be advantageous for mid-range distance running.

Author List

Blakeley N, Silver-Thorn B, Cross JA

Author

Janelle A. Cross PhD Assistant Professor in the Orthopaedic Surgery department at Medical College of Wisconsin