| Literature DB >> 23702267 |
Daniel Pérez-Prieto1, Sergi Gil-González, Xavier Pelfort, Joan Leal-Blanquet, Lluís Puig-Verdié, Pedro Hinarejos.
Abstract
It is not clear whether indicating TKA-surgery is advisable in depressed patients. A prospective cohort of 716 patients undergoing TKA was designed. SF36, KSS, WOMAC and VAS plus 2 satisfaction questions were evaluated. There were 2 groups: 200 patients were depressed and 516 were not. Preoperative/postoperative results show better scores for non-depressed patients on almost every sub-scale. Nevertheless, net change results (improvement) were quite similar: 65.74 improvement in depressed-KSS and 74.58 in non-depressed (P=0.049); 8.93 net change in depressed-Physical Composite Score and 11.84 in non-depressed (P=0.003); 2.38 in depressed-Mental Composite Score and -0.61 in non-depressed (P=0.024). Depressed patients obtained great improvement from preoperative at one-year follow-up and even greater than non-depressed patients in some domains. Moreover, satisfaction was similar. Therefore, TKA can be recommended to depressed patients.Entities:
Keywords: depression; function; health related quality of life; outcomes; total knee arthroplasty
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23702267 DOI: 10.1016/j.arth.2013.04.030
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Arthroplasty ISSN: 0883-5403 Impact factor: 4.757