| Literature DB >> 30967131 |
Hongbo Chen1, Xiaoyan Zheng2, Hongjie Huang3, Congying Liu1, Qiaoqin Wan1, Shaomei Shang4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Knee osteoarthritis (KOA) is common in elderly people, causes pain, loss of physical functioning, and disability. This was a two-arm, superiority, quasi-experimental trial. The aim of this study was to evaluate the effectiveness of a home-based exercise intervention (HBEI) to reduce KOA symptoms and improve the physical functioning of elderly patients.Entities:
Keywords: Aged; Exercise; Osteoarthritis; Pain
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30967131 PMCID: PMC6456993 DOI: 10.1186/s12891-019-2521-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Details of home-based exercises
| Exercises | Details |
|---|---|
| Isometric contractions of the quadriceps | 1. Sitting or lying down, legs relaxing; |
| Supine straight-leg lifts | 1. Lie on the back, stretch knees; |
| Leg lifts in the prone position | 1. Lie face down, stretch knees; |
| Passive knee flexion | 1. Sit on the bed; |
| Passive knee extension | 1. Sit on the bed; |
| Resistance knee extension | 1. Sit on the chair or at the bed, tie a 1 kg sandbag to the ankle, keep the upper body straight; |
| Resistance knee flexion | 1. Standing up, tie a 1 kg weight sandbag to the ankle joint, and support the upper edge of the chair; |
| Shifting the center of gravity (left and right) | 1. Stand up and support a table with a height of 70~80 cm and open the feet; |
| Shifting the center of gravity (forwards and backwards) | 1. Stand up and support a table with a height of 70~80 cm and take one step forward on one side; |
The demographic characteristics of the recruited sample at baseline
| Characteristic | Total ( | Intervention ( | Control ( | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| (%) |
| (%) |
| (%) | ||
| Age - Mean (SD), yb | 68.9 | (7.35) | 68.9 | (7.78) | 68.8 | (6.96) | 0.963 |
| Gendera | |||||||
| Male | 22 | (15.6) | 12 | (16.9) | 10 | (14.3) | 0.669 |
| Female | 119 | (84.4) | 59 | (83.1) | 60 | (85.7) | |
| Body mass index - Mean (SD), kg/m2b | 25.2 | (3.48) | 25.0 | (3.45) | 25.4 | (3.51) | 0.565 |
| Symptom duration - Mean (SD), y | 6.4 | (8.52) | 6.7 | (9.39) | 6.0 | (7.60) | 0.664 |
| Level of educationa | 0.524 | ||||||
| Primary school or less | 22 | (15.6) | 12 | (16.9) | 10 | (14.3) | |
| Junior high school | 48 | (34.0) | 25 | (35.2) | 23 | (32.9) | |
| High school | 31 | (22.0) | 12 | (16.9) | 19 | (27.1) | |
| College graduate and above | 40 | (28.4) | 22 | (31.0) | 18 | (25.7) | |
| Marital statusa | 0.669 | ||||||
| Single | 22 | (15.6) | 12 | (16.9) | 10 | (14.3) | |
| Married | 119 | (84.4) | 59 | (83.1) | 60 | (85.7) | |
| Number of affected knees a | 0.207 | ||||||
| One | 63 | (44.7) | 28 | (39.4) | 35 | (50.0) | |
| Two | 78 | (55.3) | 43 | (60.6) | 35 | (50.0) | |
| Uses a walkera | 0.637 | ||||||
| Yes | 5 | (3.5) | 2 | (2.8) | 3 | (4.3) | |
| No | 136 | (96.5) | 69 | (97.2) | 67 | (95.7) | |
| Comorbid conditionsa | |||||||
| Hypertension | 0.553 | ||||||
| Yes | 68 | (48.2) | 36 | (50.7) | 32 | (45.7) | |
| No | 73 | (51.8) | 35 | (49.3) | 38 | (54.3) | |
| Diabetes | 0.560 | ||||||
| Yes | 29 | (20.6) | 16 | (22.5) | 13 | (18.6) | |
| No | 112 | (79.4) | 55 | (77.5) | 57 | (81.4) | |
| Coronary heart disease | 0.743 | ||||||
| Yes | 38 | (27.0) | 20 | (28.2) | 18 | (25.7) | |
| No | 103 | (73.0) | 51 | (71.8) | 52 | (74.3) | |
| Osteoporosis | 0.105 | ||||||
| Yes | 21 | (14.9) | 14 | (19.7) | 7 | (10.0) | |
| No | 120 | (85.1) | 57 | (80.3) | 63 | (90.0) | |
| Current drug use | |||||||
| Analgesics | 0.654 | ||||||
| Yes | 32 | (22.7) | 15 | (21.1) | 17 | (24.3) | |
| No | 109 | (77.3) | 56 | (78.9) | 53 | (75.7) | |
| Cartilage protection drugs | 0.067 | ||||||
| Yes | 29 | (20.6) | 19 | (26.8) | 10 | (14.3) | |
| No | 112 | (79.4) | 52 | (73.2) | 60 | (85.7) | |
aChi-square or Fisher’s Exact tests were used
bIndependent samples t-test was used
Fig. 1Flowchart of the study participants
Outcome measures over time by groupb
| Intervention ( | Control ( | F | Parameter estimate of GLM | 95% CI of parameter estimate of GLM | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline | 12 weeks | Baseline | 12 weeks | ||||||
| Primary outcome | |||||||||
| WOMAC pain | 7.34 ± 3.36 | 4.28 ± 3.30 | 7.19 ± 4.48 | 5.73 ± 3.54 | 0.683 | 7.575 | 0.007* | −1.60 | −2.75,-0.58 |
| WOMAC stiffness a | 2 (0,3) | 1 (0,3) | 2 (1,4) | 2 (1,4) | 0.428 | 7.215 | 0.008* | −0.79 | −1.37, -0.21 |
| Secondary outcomes | |||||||||
| FTSST, s | 14.22 ± 3.10 | 12.13 ± 2.93 | 14.49 ± 4.10 | 14.13 ± 4.13 | 0.669 | 40.272 | <0.001* | −2.82 | −3.70, -1.94 |
| TUG, s | 13.30 ± 3.14 | 11.73 ± 1.97 | 13.02 ± 3.27 | 12.60 ± 2.81 | 0.611 | 21.178 | <0.001* | −1.37 | − 1.96, -0.78 |
| 6MWT, m | 408.45 ± 60.54 | 442.39 ± 49.70 | 422.86 ± 49.29 | 417.57 ± 53.04 | 0.124 | 12.457 | 0.001* | 29.81 | 13.11, 46.51 |
| AIMS2-SF total | 75.06 ± 10.00 | 82.00 ± 9.96 | 76.57 ± 10.62 | 77.90 ± 9.52 | 0.433 | 13.263 | <0.001* | 5.08 | 2.32, 7.84 |
| AIMS2-SF-body | 27.04 ± 4.50 | 29.54 ± 3.82 | 27.94 ± 4.77 | 28.43 ± 4.29 | 0.174 | 8.459 | 0.004* | 1.65 | 0.53, 2.77 |
| AIMS2-SF-symptoms | 10.75 ± 2.41 | 12.62 ± 1.85 | 10.89 ± 2.11 | 11.34 ± 1.78 | 0.998 | 11.548 | 0.001* | 1.30 | 0.54, 2.05 |
| AIMS2-SF- emotionala | 21 (20, 24) | 25 (20, 25) | 22 (20, 24) | 22 (19.75, 24) | 0.486 | 5.640 | 0.019* | 1.11 | 0.19, 2.03 |
| AIMS2-SF- societya | 16 (15, 18) | 18 (15. 20) | 17 (14, 20) | 17 (14.75, 20) | 0.316 | 5.403 | 0.022* | 1.11 | 0.17, 2.05 |
‡ Independent t-test or Mann-Whitney U Test was used (week 0 intergroup comparison)
† The general linear model was used to analyze differences between the intervention and control groups; community was a random factor; baseline scores were covariates; and the control group was the reference
aMedian (Interquartile Range)
bFTSST Five-times-sit-to-stand test, the unit of this outcome measure is seconds, TUG Timed up and go test, the unit of this outcome measure is seconds, 6MWT The six-minute walk test, the unit of this outcome measure is meters, WOMAC Western Ontario and McMaster Universities osteoarthritis index, pain (0–20), stiffness (0–8), AIMS2-SF Arthritis impact measurement scales 2 - short form, body (7–35), symptom (3–15), emotional (5–25), society (4–20), total (19–95), CI Confidence interval, SD Standard deviation, GLM General linear model. p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant