Gait & Posture
Volume 35, Issue 4 , Pages 556-560, April 2012

Compressive tibiofemoral force during crouch gait

  • Katherine M. Steele

      Affiliations

    • Department of Mechanical Engineering, Stanford University, USA
  • ,
  • Matthew S. DeMers

      Affiliations

    • Department of Mechanical Engineering, Stanford University, USA
  • ,
  • Michael H. Schwartz

      Affiliations

    • The James R. Gage Center for Gait and Motion Analysis, Gillette Children's Specialty Healthcare, USA
    • Departments of Orthopaedic Surgery and Biomedical Engineering, University of Minnesota, USA
  • ,
  • Scott L. Delp

      Affiliations

    • Department of Mechanical Engineering, Stanford University, USA
    • Department of Bioengineering, Stanford University, USA
    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author at: Departments of Mechanical Engineering and Bioengineering, Clark Center, Room S-321, 318 Campus Drive, Stanford, CA 94305-5450 USA. Tel.: +1 650 723 1230; fax: +1 650 723 8544.

Received 10 August 2011; received in revised form 31 October 2011; accepted 20 November 2011. published online 29 December 2011.

Abstract 

Crouch gait, a common walking pattern in individuals with cerebral palsy, is characterized by excessive flexion of the hip and knee. Many subjects with crouch gait experience knee pain, perhaps because of elevated muscle forces and joint loading. The goal of this study was to examine how muscle forces and compressive tibiofemoral force change with the increasing knee flexion associated with crouch gait. Muscle forces and tibiofemoral force were estimated for three unimpaired children and nine children with cerebral palsy who walked with varying degrees of knee flexion. We scaled a generic musculoskeletal model to each subject and used the model to estimate muscle forces and compressive tibiofemoral forces during walking. Mild crouch gait (minimum knee flexion 20–35°) produced a peak compressive tibiofemoral force similar to unimpaired walking; however, severe crouch gait (minimum knee flexion>50°) increased the peak force to greater than 6 times body-weight, more than double the load experienced during unimpaired gait. This increase in compressive tibiofemoral force was primarily due to increases in quadriceps force during crouch gait, which increased quadratically with average stance phase knee flexion (i.e., crouch severity). Increased quadriceps force contributes to larger tibiofemoral and patellofemoral loading which may contribute to knee pain in individuals with crouch gait.

Keywords: Knee, Walking, Compressive force, Cerebral palsy, Crouch gait

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PII: S0966-6362(11)00791-0

doi:10.1016/j.gaitpost.2011.11.023

Gait & Posture
Volume 35, Issue 4 , Pages 556-560, April 2012