| Literature DB >> 35228957 |
YaQun Zhou1, Justin Chin2,3, Abigail Evangelista4, Blake Podger2, Peter J Wan5, Christine M Lomiguen6,2.
Abstract
Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) is a very common surgical treatment approach for severe osteoarthritis. Complications of TKA include loss of range of motion and prolonged analgesic requirement for pain control. Osteopathic manipulative techniques (OMT) have been utilized to address localized muscular stiffness to improve range of motion; however, limited studies directly correlate OMT and TKA recovery. This review highlights the therapeutic benefits OMT can have in the postoperative management of arthroplasty with respect to range of motion, edema, pain perception, and ability to perform activities of daily living. This review revealed the use of OMT would positively influence range of motion by manipulation of localized musculature and can result in decreased demand for analgesics. This can, in turn, shorten hospital stay and return the ability of patients to perform activities of daily living earlier than without OMT. Increased research is needed to strengthen these findings on the benefits of OMT in the postoperative management of arthroplasty.Entities:
Keywords: knee osteoarthritis; knee osteoarthritis (koa); oa; osteoarthritis; osteopathic manipulative medicine (omm); osteopathic medicine; physical therapy; tka; total knee arthroplasty; total knee replacement (tkr)
Year: 2022 PMID: 35228957 PMCID: PMC8873409 DOI: 10.7759/cureus.21599
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cureus ISSN: 2168-8184
Figure 1PRISMA flowchart for literature review
PRISMA: Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses
Included publications categorized by publication date, study type, and complication examined.
TKA: total knee arthroplasty, ADL: activities of daily living, OMM: osteopathic manipulative medicine
| Author, Year of publication | Type of study | Participants | Study Measurements |
| Anouchi et al., 1996 [ | Prospective Cohort Study | 621 patients, 282 with TKA at one year and 86 at two-year follow-up | Mobility |
| Lizaur et al., 1997 [ | Prospective Study | 74 patients after TKA | Mobility |
| Slemenda et al., 1997 [ | Cross-Sectional Prevalence Study | 462 patients | Pain Control, ADL |
| Brittain et al., 1999 [ | Prospective Clinical Trial | 60 TKA patients, with 20 receiving OMT and 40 as a control | Hospital Stay |
| Jarski et al., 2000 [ | Prospective, Match-Controlled Outcome Study | 166 patients, 38 patients received OMM | Mobility, Pain Control |
| Scranton, 2001 [ | Prospective Cohort Study | 33 patients | Mobility, Pain Control |
| Sharma et al., 2001 [ | Cross Sectional Cohort Study | 237 patients; 230 completed study | ADL, Hospital Stay |
| Harris & Piller, 2003 [ | Case Report/Series | Three lymphedema patients | Mobility |
| Ranawat et al., 2003 [ | Prospective Observational Study | 116 patients studied pre-operatively and one, three, six, and 12 months post-TKA | Hospital Stay, Pain Control |
| Licciardone et al., 2004 [ | Prospective Double-Blind Study | 50 patients receiving OMM after knee or hip arthroplasty | Mobility, ADL |
| Felson, 2006 [ | Case Report | One patient with bilateral knee pain | Pain Control, Mobility |
| Gugel & Johnston, 2006 [ | Case Report | One patient; 27-year-old, post-knee arthroscopy with subsequent somatic dysfunctions found | Mobility, ADL |
| Andersen et al., 2009 [ | Prospective Cohort Study | 50 knee and 50 hip arthroplasty patients | Pain Control |
| Garrett & Walters, 2010 [ | Case-Control Study | 280 questionnaires sent to surgeons regarding post-TKA recovery | Pain Control, ADL |
| Cushner et al., 2010 [ | Prospective Observational Study | 8325 post-TKA patients | Hospital Stay, ADL |
| Ebert et al., 2013 [ | Prospective Randomized Controlled Trial | 53 patients; 43 TKA with lymphatic post-operative treatment | Mobility, Pain Control |
| Pozzi et al., 2013 [ | Systematic Review | 19 studies | Hospital Stay, ADL |
| Schulze & Scharf, 2013 [ | Systematic Review | 25 publications from 1990-2012 | Pain Control, ADL |
Common osteopathic manipulative techniques and its usage.
Of note, muscle energy and myofascial techniques have variations that are indirect; however, direct is the most common iteration.
| Technique | Type | Description |
| Muscle Energy | Direct Active | Achieve a greater range of motion through reciprocal inhibition, by freeing the barrier of motion with patient contraction of antagonistic muscle |
| Myofascial | Direct Passive | Achieve relaxation of musculature and pain reduction through the Golgi tendon reflex by applying slow and constant pressure to the muscle belly |
| Counterstrain | Indirect Passive | Achieve muscle relaxation and pain reduction through shortening of muscles |
| Effleurage | Indirect Passive | Achieve an improved lymphatic drainage by applying guiding movements and gentle pressure |
| Lymphatic Pump | Indirect Passive | Achieve an improvement in lymphatic flow by applying rhythmic pressure. |
Figure 2Artistic representation of normal knee anatomy compared to status post total knee replacement.
Original illustration by author YaQun Zhou