Total knee arthroplasty remains the gold standard in the management of disabling gonarthrosis. Improved functional results, increased availability of care and an ageing population have all contributed to the rise in total knee replacement surgery in Western countries. Surgical techniques have been steadily improving for several decades in terms of implant positioning and joint alignment. However, 10% of patients are dissatisfied with the clinical and functional results. The challenge is to understand why these patients remain dissatisfied despite these surgical advances. Our aim is to understand the functional impact of knee prosthesis through a quantified analysis of gait, the performance of certain tasks of daily living, and pre- and post-operative proprioceptive assessments. We will link these results with patient feedback to identify factors potentially responsible for poor postoperative outcomes.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
15
The following explorations will be carried out pre-operatively (pre-OP), then post-operatively at 3 months (post-OP3) and 12 months (post-OP12) : * Quantified gait analysis (QGA) * Functional tests (mechanical analysis of everyday tasks): * SIT-TO-STAND test (test consisting of standing up and sitting down on a chair) * STEP INITIATION test (test consisting of walking up a step and then down) * Proprioceptive tests : * Joint Position Sense (JPS) (angle memorization and reproduction test at the knee joint) * OBSTACLE CLEARANCE test (test consisting in simulating the clearance of an obstacle) * Questionnaires : * Functional questionnaires : * KSS (Knee Society Score) * SKV (Simple knee value) * KOOS (Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score) * Quality of life (EQ5D-5L) The total duration of each exploration session is estimated at 1 hour .
Grenoble University Hospital
Grenoble, France
Post-operative functional recovery of patients who have undergone total knee arthroplasty for gonarthrosis by analyzing their locomotion ability
The primary endpoint is a composite endpoint assessed by quantified gait analysis (QGA) : 1/ Gait speed 2 / Step length
Time frame: Preoperatively (PreOP) and 12 months postoperatively (PostOP12)
Functional recovery by analyzing changes in gait variability
Functional recovery is assessed by quantified gait analysis (QGA) : Measurement of step length Measurement of step width Measurement of cycle time Measurement of step speed and cadence Measurement of gait variability and stability parameters
Time frame: Preoperatively (PreOP) , 3 months postoperatively (PostOP3), 12 months postoperatively (PostOP3)
Impact of total knee arthroplasty (TKA) on proprioception
Proprioception is assessed by Joint Position Sense (JPS) test : Error between target angle and established angle: average absolute error in relation to the target angle in degrees. This will enable us to obtain an average absolute error for the three trials for each target angle per lower limb and per patient.
Time frame: Preoperatively (PreOP) , 3 months postoperatively (PostOP3), 12 months postoperatively (PostOP3)
Functional recovery after TKA by analyzing changes in daily living tasks by SIT TO STAND test
Measurement of displacements of the center of pressure and gravity, angular velocities (trunk, knee, hip, ankle), hip and knee angular moments, ground reaction force (for each lower limb).
Time frame: Preoperatively (PreOP) , 3 months postoperatively (PostOP3), 12 months postoperatively (PostOP3)
Functional recovery after TKA by analyzing changes in daily living tasks by STEP INITIATION test
Analysis of ground reaction force on healthy side vs. pathological side during ascent and descent of step, knee joint amplitudes in flexion during ascent and descent of step.
Time frame: Preoperatively (PreOP) , 3 months postoperatively (PostOP3), 12 months postoperatively (PostOP3)
Functional recovery after TKA by analyzing changes in daily living tasks by OBSTACLE CLEARANCE test
* Analysis of obstacle-crossing accuracy (minimum foot-to-obstacle distance and distance covered by the lower limb, taking the center of the ankle as reference, until the obstacle is crossed). * Analysis of variability: Variability in the position of the center of the ankle when passing the obstacle + variability in the trajectory of the lower limb (hip and knee angles + angular velocity of the hip and knee). * Analysis of movement symmetry: Symmetry between the legs, based on the vertical distance foot-obstacle during clearance, and on the similarity index based on angles and angular velocity of the hip, knee and trunk.
Time frame: Preoperatively (PreOP) , 3 months postoperatively (PostOP3), 12 months postoperatively (PostOP3)
Evolution of Quality of Life
EQ5D-5L questionnaire
Time frame: Preoperatively (PreOP) , 3 months postoperatively (PostOP3), 12 months postoperatively (PostOP3)
Evolution of the patient's functional results assessed by the KSS questionnaire
The KSS is a functional questionnaire (e.g. questions on pain, joint amplitude, possible walking distance) completed by the patient and the surgeon.
Time frame: Preoperatively (PreOP) , 3 months postoperatively (PostOP3), 12 months postoperatively (PostOP3)
Evolution of the patient's functional results assessed by the SKV questionnaire
The SKV score is a very simple functional score, based on a single question: "How would you rate your knee on the day of the examination, compared with a normal knee in percentage terms?" completed by the patient.
Time frame: Preoperatively (PreOP) , 3 months postoperatively (PostOP3), 12 months postoperatively (PostOP3)
Evolution of the patient's functional results assessed by the KOOS questionnaire
KOOS is a questionnaire assessing knee function, pain and impact on daily life score to be completed exclusively by the patient. The questionnaire comprises five dimensions: symptoms, stiffness, pain, function of daily life and activities, sports and leisure.
Time frame: Preoperatively (PreOP) , 3 months postoperatively (PostOP3), 12 months postoperatively (PostOP3)
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