Pathophysiology of sex difference in refractoriness in lateral epicondylitis: Biomechanical study of wrist torque

JOURNAL OF ORTHOPAEDIC RESEARCH(2024)

引用 0|浏览3
暂无评分
摘要
Eccentric contractions of the wrist extensors worsen lateral epicondylitis (LE), whose pathophysiology may involve sex differences in wrist torque. This study aimed to investigate sex differences in wrist torque in patients with LE. The wrist extension and flexion torques of 22 patients with LE (11 males and 11 females) were measured. Maximum muscle output over time was measured for 20 s, initial torque was defined as muscle strength, and the degree of eccentric contraction was quantified and defined as the eccentric contraction index (ECI). The affected/unaffected side ratio of the wrist extensor, extensor/flexor ratio of muscle strength, and affected/unaffected side difference of ECI between sexes were statistically analyzed. Furthermore, correlations between wrist extensor torque, ECI, and Visual Analog Scale of pain during the examination were evaluated. Females were found to display lower affected/unaffected side ratios of the wrist extensor and wrist extension/flexion ratios for the affected side, compared with males; however, no differences were found in the wrist extension/flexion ratios for the unaffected side in both sexes. Additionally, females presented with larger differences between the affected and unaffected sides in the ECI. Based on correlations between wrist torques, ECI, and pain, females tended to suppress muscle output to prevent pain from eccentric contraction of wrist extensors more than males, which would induce an imbalance in muscle strength of the wrist extensors and flexors. This imbalance may result in chronic eccentric contraction of the wrist extensors with gripping, exacerbating LE. This study aimed to clarify the gender difference in wrist torque in patients with lateral epicondylitis. We evaluated 11 wrists in males and females each. The wrist extensor's torque of affected/unaffected side ratios, extension/flexion ratio, and eccentric contraction index were all larger in males than in females. Females suppressed muscle output significantly to prevent pain from eccentric contraction, which induced an imbalance in muscle strength of the wrist extensors and flexors, that is, at a high risk of exacerbating lateral epicondylitis.image
更多
查看译文
关键词
biomechanics,elbow,tendon
AI 理解论文
溯源树
样例
生成溯源树,研究论文发展脉络
Chat Paper
正在生成论文摘要