Background: Passive ankle stability under weight-bearing conditions
has been found to depend substantially on the role of the articular surface
geometry. In the present study, it was hypothesized that, in the ankle under
axial loading, contact-stress changes in response to alterations of external
load involve reproducible and specific patterns to maintain ankle
stability.
Methods: Six cadaver ankles with the peri-ankle ligaments intact
were tested. Each specimen, held at several predetermined ankle positions
under a primary one-body-weight axial force, was subjected to an additional
secondary load. The secondary load—specifically, anterior/posterior
shear force, inversion/eversion torque, or internal/external rotation
torque—was applied independently, while motion associated with the two
other secondary loading directions was unconstrained. Contact stress in the
tibiotalar articulation was monitored by a real-time contact-stress sensor.
Site-specific stress changes solely due to secondary loading at each
load/position were identified by subtraction of the corresponding
axial-force-only baseline distribution. The role of these stress changes in
ankle stabilization was studied for each specimen by analyzing the data with a
computer model of ankle geometry.
Results: In the cadaver experiment, anterior and posterior shear
forces caused reproducible positive changes in articular contact stresses on
the anterior and posterior regions, respectively. Similar changes with version
torques occurred on the medial and lateral regions. Positive changes with
internal/external rotation torques occurred at two diagonal locations:
anterolateral and posteromedial, or anteromedial and posterolateral. In the
model analysis, these stress-change patterns were found to be effective in
ankle stabilization, and the levels of contribution by the articular surface
were calculated as accounting for approximately 70% of anterior/posterior
stability, 50% of version stability, and 30% of internal/external rotation
stability.
Conclusions: The documented changes in contact stress illustrate the
major role of articular geometry in passive ankle stabilization. The levels of
contribution by the articular surface that we calculated are consistent with
those reported in the literature. These findings support the conceptual
mechanism of ankle stabilization by redistribution of articular contact
stress.
Clinical Relevance: Passive ankle stability under weight-bearing
conditions appears to be dictated by the integrity of articular surface
geometry, implying that any abnormality of that geometry can affect joint
kinematics during locomotive activities.