| Literature DB >> 19457252 |
François Desmeules1, Clermont E Dionne, Etienne Belzile, Renée Bourbonnais, Pierre Frémont.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent evidences show that education and rehabilitation while waiting for knee replacement have positive effects on the patients' health status. Identification of factors associated with worse pain, function and health-related quality of life (HRQoL) while waiting for surgery could help develop pre-surgery rehabilitation interventions that target specifically these factors and prioritize patients that may benefit the most from them. The objectives of this study were to measure pain, stiffness, function and HRQoL in patients at enrolment on waiting lists for knee replacement and to identify demographic, clinical, socioeconomic and psychosocial characteristics associated with these outcomes.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19457252 PMCID: PMC2694153 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2474-10-52
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Figure 1Flowchart of patients' recruitment. * Eligibility status unknown (considered in calculation of participation proportion).
Characteristics of the study participants at enrolment on the waiting lists for total knee replacement (n = 197)
| | 67 (9.8) | |
| | ||
| Female | 126 (64) | |
| Male | 71 (36) | |
| | ||
| Single, separated, divorced or widowed | 72 (37) | |
| Married or common law | 125 (63) | |
| | ||
| Living alone | 45 (23) | |
| Not living alone | 152 (77) | |
| | 31.0 (6.3) | |
| | 6.2 (2.3) | |
| | 8.5 (8.8) | |
| | ||
| Yes | 53 (27) | |
| No | 144 (73) | |
| | ||
| Yes | 74 (38) | |
| No | 123 (62) | |
| | ||
| High school or less | 112 (57) | |
| College or university | 85 (43) | |
| | ||
| Retired | 128 (65) | |
| Employed | 39 (20) | |
| Not working or sickness benefit | 30 (15) | |
| | ||
| < $30 000/year | 61 (36) | |
| ≥ $30 000/year | 107 (64) | |
| | 6.9 (6.5) | |
| | ||
| Low | 92 (47) | |
| High | 105(53) |
* Body mass index
** Cumulative illness rating scale (CIRS); n = 177
† Established from the WOMAC pain score for the contralateral knee
‡ n = 168
§ Social support was dichotomized around the median score: Low (≤ 80) and High (> 80)
Health-related quality of life of the study participants and comparison with Canadian normative data (n = 197)
| Physical functioning | 24.3 (17.9)* | 21.8 – 26.8 | 75.7 (22.2) | 74.9 – 76.5 |
| Role-physical | 39.3 (25.6)* | 35.7 – 42.9 | 76.2 (36.5) | 74.9 – 77.5 |
| Bodily pain | 27.5 (11.7)* | 25.8 – 29.1 | 74.0 (23.9) | 73.1 – 74.8 |
| General health | 37.1 (10.4)* | 35.6 – 38.6 | 73.5 (18.4) | 72.8 – 74.1 |
| Vitality | 39.5 (13.4)* | 37.6 – 41.4 | 67.7 (18.1) | 67.0 – 68.3 |
| Social functioning§ | 40.9 (15.2)* | 38.8 – 43.0 | 87.0 (19.8) | 86.2 – 87.7 |
| Role-emotional§ | 69.8 (26.3)* | 66.1 – 73.5 | 83.4 (32.8) | 82.2 – 84.6 |
| Mental health§ | 53.4 (11.4)* | 51.8 – 55.0 | 79.3 (15.0) | 78.8 – 79.8 |
| Physical component scale (PCS)§ | 28.2 (6.4)* | 27.3 – 29.1 | 47.2 (9.7) | 46.8 – 47.6 |
| Mental component scale (MCS)§ | 42.9 (8.1)* | 41.7 – 44.0 | 53.7 (8.3) | 53.4 – 54.0 |
† A higher score signs a better health-related quality of life
‡ Age matched normative data
§ n = 196
* Significantly lower (worse) than the Canadian normative data, p < 0.05
Associations between the study participants' characteristics and the WOMAC scores (n = 197)
| Contralateral knee pain | - 7.65 | - 14.56 – - 3.29 | 0.009* |
| Psychological distress | - 0.45 | - 0.83 – - 0.07 | 0.020* |
| BMI§ | - 0.46 | - 0.86 – - 0.05 | 0.026* |
| Contralateral knee pain | - 10.07 | - 16.60 – - 3.54 | 0.003* |
| Duration of symptoms | 0.53 | 0.18 – 0.87 | 0.003* |
| Psychological distress | - 0.55 | - 1.00 – - 0.11 | 0.015* |
| Contralateral knee pain | - 7.18 | - 11.43 – - 2.93 | 0.001* |
| Psychological distress | - 0.53 | - 0.82 – - 0.24 | 0.004* |
| BMI | - 0.42 | - 0.72 – - 0.12 | 0.006* |
| Use of a walking aid | - 4.81 | - 8.70 – - 0.94 | 0.015* |
† Stepwise multiple regression analysis. Age and gender were forced into all models.
‡ Multivariate unstandardized linear regression coefficients. For each unit of the participants' characteristics, there is in average a β increase (+) or a decrease (-) on the WOMAC score. A positive β has a positive effect on the participants' condition and a negative β has a negative effect.
* p < 0.05
§ BMI = Body mass index
Associations between the study participants' characteristics and the SF-36 health-related quality of life scores (n = 197)
| BMI§ | - 0.69 | - 1.10 – - 0.29 | <0.001* |
| Use of a walking aid | - 8.28 | - 13.25 – - 3.31 | 0.001* |
| Contralateral knee pain | - 6.03 | - 11.37 – - 0.69 | 0.027* |
| Age | - 0.26 | -0.52 – - 0.01 | 0.049* |
| Use of a walking aid | - 15.23 | - 22.42 – - 8.06 | <0.001* |
| Psychological distress | - 0.71 | - 1.23 – - 0.18 | 0.008* |
| Marital status (Married or common law) | 8.47 | 1.08 – 15.85 | 0.025* |
| Comorbidities | -1.46 | - 2.95 – - 0.03 | 0.044* |
| Use of a walking aid | - 3.85 | - 7.27 – - 0.44 | 0.027* |
| Use of a walking aid | - 2.90 | - 4.78 – - 1.02 | 0.003* |
| BMI | - 0.17 | - 0.32 – - 0.02 | 0.030* |
| Psychological distress | - 0.74 | - 0.88 – - 0.60 | <0.001* |
| Low social support | - 2.28 | - 4.14 – - 0.41 | 0.017* |
| Contralateral knee pain | - 2.60 | - 4.61 – - 0.59 | 0.011* |
† Stepwise multiple regression analysis. Age and gender were forced into all models.
‡ Multivariate unstandardized linear regression coefficients. For each unit of the participants' characteristics there is on average a β increase (+) or a decrease (-) on the SF-36 score. A positive β has a positive effect on the participants' condition and a negative β has a negative effect.
* p < 0.05
§ BMI = Body mass index
° n = 196