vendex has been researched along with Compartment-Syndromes* in 2 studies
2 other study(ies) available for vendex and Compartment-Syndromes
Article | Year |
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Role of knee kinematics and kinetics on performance and disability in people with medial compartment knee osteoarthritis.
Although gait characteristics have been well documented in people with knee osteoarthritis, little is known about the relationships between gait characteristics and performance or disability. Our purpose was to examine the role of knee kinematics and kinetics on walking performance and disability in people with knee osteoarthritis. We also examined whether pain mediated the relationship between the knee adduction moment and performance or disability.. Three-dimensional gait analysis was conducted on 54 people with medial compartment knee osteoarthritis. Performance was quantified with the Six Minute Walk test and disability was self-reported on the Short Form-36. The pain subscale of the Western Ontario McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index and the functional self-efficacy subscale of the Arthritis Self-Efficacy scale were completed.. A step-wise linear regression demonstrated that the variance in Six Minute Walk test scores was explained by functional self-efficacy (50%) and the range of knee motion (8%). The variance in Short Form-36 was explained by pain (36%), the peak extension angle (19%) and the range of knee motion (4%). Pain was unrelated to the knee adduction moment so analyses of pain as a mediator of the adduction moment on either performance or disability were halted.. Kinematic output from the motor control system is useful in understanding some variance in current performance and disability in people with knee osteoarthritis. The knee adduction moment was unrelated to these variables and pain did not mediate between the knee adduction moment and performance or disability. Therefore this moment does not explain current clinical status in people with knee osteoarthritis based on the measures of performance and disability used in this study. Topics: Aged; Arthralgia; Biomechanical Phenomena; Compartment Syndromes; Disability Evaluation; Female; Gait; Humans; Kinetics; Knee Joint; Male; Middle Aged; Motor Skills; Osteoarthritis, Knee; Range of Motion, Articular; Task Performance and Analysis; Torque | 2006 |
Near-infrared spectroscopy for monitoring of tissue oxygenation of exercising skeletal muscle in a chronic compartment syndrome model.
Variations in the levels of muscle hemoglobin and of myoglobin oxygen saturation can be detected non-invasively with near-infrared spectroscopy. This technique could be applied to the diagnosis of chronic compartment syndrome, in which invasive testing has shown increased intramuscular pressure associated with ischemia and pain during exercise. We simulated chronic compartment syndrome in ten healthy subjects (seven men and three women) by applying external compression, through a wide inflatable cuff, to increase the intramuscular pressure in the anterior compartment of the leg. The tissue oxygenation of the tibialis anterior muscle was measured with near-infrared spectroscopy during gradual inflation of the cuff to a pressure of forty millimeters of mercury (5.33 kilopascals) during fourteen minutes of cyclic isokinetic dorsiflexion and plantar flexion of the ankle. The subjects exercised with and without external compression. The data on tissue oxygenation for each subject then were normalized to a scale of 100 per cent (the baseline value, or the value at rest) to 0 per cent (the physiological minimum, or the level of oxygenation achieved by exercise to exhaustion during arterial occlusion of the lower extremity). With external compression, tissue oxygenation declined at a rate of 1.4 +/- 0.3 per cent per minute (mean and standard error) during exercise. After an initial decrease at the onset, tissue oxygenation did not decline during exercise without compression. The recovery of tissue oxygenation after exercise was twice as slow with compression (2.5 +/- 0.6 minutes) than it was without the use of compression (1.3 +/- 0.2 minutes). Topics: Adolescent; Adult; Chronic Disease; Compartment Syndromes; Female; Hemoglobins; Humans; Ischemia; Isometric Contraction; Leg; Male; Middle Aged; Monitoring, Physiologic; Muscle Contraction; Muscle, Skeletal; Myoglobin; Oxygen Consumption; Pain; Physical Endurance; Physical Exertion; Pressure; Spectroscopy, Near-Infrared; Torque | 1997 |