1991
DOI: 10.1016/0049-0172(91)90036-y
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Mechanical determinants of osteoarthrosis

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Cited by 291 publications
(158 citation statements)
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“…A cutoff of 2 mm was chosen because Ͻ2 mm medial JSW is considered to indicate advanced disease (28). The OA sample and the normative reference group were comparable for age, but 30 Fransen et al the OA sample had a higher body weight in each stratified group (Table 1). A large proportion of this sample of referred patients with knee OA reported symptom duration of 5 years or longer and advanced radiographic disease.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 83%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…A cutoff of 2 mm was chosen because Ͻ2 mm medial JSW is considered to indicate advanced disease (28). The OA sample and the normative reference group were comparable for age, but 30 Fransen et al the OA sample had a higher body weight in each stratified group (Table 1). A large proportion of this sample of referred patients with knee OA reported symptom duration of 5 years or longer and advanced radiographic disease.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 83%
“…The loss of force with aging has been attributed to both a loss of functioning motor neurons as well as a reduced number of fast-twitch muscle fibers (29). Both animal and human studies have demonstrated that loading rate, rather than load magnitude, is the critical factor for cartilage damage in OA (30). Fast-twitch muscle fibers function to rapidly develop high tension for short periods of time, and, arguably, isometric testing is a poor indicator of the capacity of a muscle to reduce potentially destructive high loading rates.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…At this stage, cartilage is even more prone to wearing. Besides degenerative changes in cartilage, the underlying bone undergoes a remodeling process that leads to a sclerosis of the subchondral bone (Radin, 1976). The developing OA increases pain, restricts exercise and limits physical capability.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Medially localised cartilage lesions, on the other hand, were situated in a transitional region between moderate and slight subchondral mineralisation; they may be caused by infrequent stress peaks and by shear stress in the articular cartilage, the very medial part of the Joint being deprived of mechanical Stimulation for much of the time. These lesions It is widely accepted that mechanical factors play an important part in the initiation and progression of osteoarthrosis in general and chondromalacia of the patella in particular [11,25]. Nevertheless, the exact nature of the mechanism leading to Joint damage, and the exact localisation of the initial changes in cartilage degeneration are still a matter of discussion and disagreement [17].…”
Section: T Naidichmentioning
confidence: 99%