TY - JOUR T1 - No effects of functional exercise therapy on walking biomechanics in patients with knee osteoarthritis: exploratory outcome analyses from a randomised trial JF - BMJ Open Sport & Exercise Medicine JO - BMJ OPEN SP EX MED DO - 10.1136/bmjsem-2017-000230 VL - 2 IS - 1 SP - bmjsem-2017-000230 AU - Marius Henriksen AU - Louise Klokker AU - Cecilie Bartholdy AU - Tanja Schjoedt-Jorgensen AU - Elisabeth Bandak AU - Henning Bliddal Y1 - 2017/03/01 UR - http://bmjopensem.bmj.com/content/2/1/bmjsem-2017-000230.abstract N2 - Aim To assess the effects of a functional and individualised exercise programme on gait biomechanics during walking in people with knee OA.Methods Sixty participants were randomised to 12 weeks of facility-based functional and individualised neuromuscular exercise therapy (ET), 3 sessions per week supervised by trained physical therapists, or a no attention control group (CG). Three-dimensional gait analyses were used, from which a comprehensive list of conventional gait variables were extracted (totally 52 kinematic, kinetic and spatiotemporal variables). According to the protocol, the analyses were based on the ‘Per-Protocol’ population (defined as participants following the protocol with complete and valid gait analyses). Analysis of covariance adjusting for the level at baseline was used to determine differences between groups (95% CIs) in the changes from baseline at follow-up.Results The per-protocol population included 46 participants (24 ET/22 CG). There were no group differences in the analysed gait variables, except for a significant group difference in the second peak knee flexor moment and second peak vertical ground reaction force.Conclusion While plausible we have limited confidence in the findings due to multiple statistical tests and lack of biomechanical logics. Therefore we conclude that a 12-week supervised individualised neuromuscular exercise programme has no effects on gait biomechanics. Future studies should focus on exercise programmes specifically designed to alter gait patterns, or include other measures of mobility, such as walking on stairs or inclined surfaces.Trial registration number ClinicalTrials.gov: NCT01545258. ER -