Toe-in and toe-out gait retraining interventions for individuals with knee osteoarthritis trial: A pilot randomised clinical trial
Gait retraining, through altering foot progression angle, has the potential to reduce pain and offload the medial tibiofemoral compartment in people with knee osteoarthritis. This pilot study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of toe-in and toe-out gait retraining on self-reported pain and physical f...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Clinical biomechanics (Bristol) 2025-01, Vol.121, p.106376, Article 106376 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Gait retraining, through altering foot progression angle, has the potential to reduce pain and offload the medial tibiofemoral compartment in people with knee osteoarthritis. This pilot study aimed to evaluate the feasibility of toe-in and toe-out gait retraining on self-reported pain and physical function, and proxy measures of medial knee load, in individuals with medial knee osteoarthritis.
Twenty participants with symptomatic medial knee osteoarthritis were randomly allocated to receive either toe-in or toe-out gait retraining for six-weeks, consisting of weekly clinician-supervised sessions and ≥ 30 min of daily self-practice. Feedback was guided by wearable sensors and a pressure-sensitive mat. Primary outcomes included recruitment rate, data completeness, adverse events, adherence, achievability, and intervention acceptability. Secondary outcomes were proxy measures of medial knee load, and self-reported pain and physical function. Differences in feasibility and self-reported outcomes were interpreted via sample t-test using intention-to-treat analysis. The effect of the intervention group on knee biomechanics was evaluated using linear mixed modelling.
Recruitment was acceptable (n = 4/month) with excellent data completeness (93 %) and attendance (82 %). Acceptability was moderate and similar between groups. There were no differences in average knee pain and physical function between groups over time, and both groups reduced maximum knee pain following the intervention (35 % improvement, p = 0.012). There were no differences in biomechanical outcomes between groups over time.
Toe-in and toe-out gait retraining is feasible and improves pain in people with knee osteoarthritis. A full-scale randomised clinical trial is warranted and should consider individualising the intervention.
•Toe-in gait and toe-out gait can be delivered by a clinician with biofeedback.•People with knee osteoarthritis could achieve both gait interventions over 6 weeks.•Both interventions reduced maximum knee pain by an average of 35 %. |
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ISSN: | 0268-0033 1879-1271 1879-1271 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.clinbiomech.2024.106376 |