Abstract
Equipment capable of objective knee analysis has been used to obtain data from 85 ‘normal’ healthy knees, 47 patients suffering with knee disorders, and three cadaveric knee joints. Among the ‘normals’ it was found that there was a correlation between body weight and stiffness and laxity. A lower stiffness and higher laxity was recorded at 20y° of knee flexion than at 90°. Using relative-paired diffrence analysis the variables affected by different injuries in patients were identified and are presented. In a separate analysis a multi-variate technique is used to interpret the data. The technique could be used to predict or diagnose knee injury, and as such may be highly useful to clinicians.
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