Acute effects of an exercise based multimodal in-patient rehabilitation protocol in male knee osteoarthritis patients and the two years follow-up sustainability.


Journal

Work (Reading, Mass.)
ISSN: 1875-9270
Titre abrégé: Work
Pays: Netherlands
ID NLM: 9204382

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
2023
Historique:
medline: 15 8 2023
pubmed: 31 1 2023
entrez: 30 1 2023
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Working with lifting and carrying heavy loads and kneeling postures with crawling, squats or heel seat position lead to progressive cartilage wear with premature degenerative changes. To investigate the effects of the exercise based multimodal 'knee college' and its sustainability in patients with knee osteoarthritis with data assessments before and after a starter course, before a 1-year and a 2-year follow-up refresher course in a retrospective observational study. A sample of 401 male patients (ICD10: M17 [arthrosis of knee]/ICF: s75011 [knee joint]) from the construction industries were assessed with Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC), EuroQol (EQ-5D), Performance Assessment Capacity Testing (PACT), Isokinetic torque H/Q ratio and Physical Work Capacity Test (PWC). Retrospectively, after two years they were divided into three groups based on their intermediate sporting activity: gym (n = 194, age: 50.8±7.0, BMI: 28.8±4,3), home training (n = 110, age: 50.2±7.0, BMI: 28.4±4,2), no exercising (n = 97, age: 48.2±7.0, BMI: 29.2±4,6). Patients did not differ significantly in their demographic and anthropometric data prior to the rehab program. Significant interaction effects indicated group-dependent differing sustainability effects for the 2-year follow-up (all outcomes: p < 0.001, except for H/Q ratio: p = 0.03). Group-wise analyses revealed significant acute improvements (after 3-week in-patient starter rehab program: p < 0.05) for all groups in almost all outcomes (except the 'no sport' group, H/Q ratio p = 0.08). These effects remained significant (p < 0.001) only for the 'gym' group during the 1-year and 2-year follow-up. Our data indicate that 2-year sustainability of acute rehabilitation starter effects was demonstrated especially for patients with adherence and compliance to long-term gym based exercises.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Working with lifting and carrying heavy loads and kneeling postures with crawling, squats or heel seat position lead to progressive cartilage wear with premature degenerative changes.
OBJECTIVE OBJECTIVE
To investigate the effects of the exercise based multimodal 'knee college' and its sustainability in patients with knee osteoarthritis with data assessments before and after a starter course, before a 1-year and a 2-year follow-up refresher course in a retrospective observational study.
METHODS METHODS
A sample of 401 male patients (ICD10: M17 [arthrosis of knee]/ICF: s75011 [knee joint]) from the construction industries were assessed with Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC), EuroQol (EQ-5D), Performance Assessment Capacity Testing (PACT), Isokinetic torque H/Q ratio and Physical Work Capacity Test (PWC). Retrospectively, after two years they were divided into three groups based on their intermediate sporting activity: gym (n = 194, age: 50.8±7.0, BMI: 28.8±4,3), home training (n = 110, age: 50.2±7.0, BMI: 28.4±4,2), no exercising (n = 97, age: 48.2±7.0, BMI: 29.2±4,6).
RESULTS RESULTS
Patients did not differ significantly in their demographic and anthropometric data prior to the rehab program. Significant interaction effects indicated group-dependent differing sustainability effects for the 2-year follow-up (all outcomes: p < 0.001, except for H/Q ratio: p = 0.03). Group-wise analyses revealed significant acute improvements (after 3-week in-patient starter rehab program: p < 0.05) for all groups in almost all outcomes (except the 'no sport' group, H/Q ratio p = 0.08). These effects remained significant (p < 0.001) only for the 'gym' group during the 1-year and 2-year follow-up.
CONCLUSION CONCLUSIONS
Our data indicate that 2-year sustainability of acute rehabilitation starter effects was demonstrated especially for patients with adherence and compliance to long-term gym based exercises.

Identifiants

pubmed: 36710693
pii: WOR205264
doi: 10.3233/WOR-205264
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

1243-1253

Auteurs

Aki Pietsch (A)

Department of Sports and Rehabilitation Medicine, BG Trauma Hospital of Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.
BG Rehabilitation Center City Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.
Department of Sports and Exercise Medicine, Institute of Human Movement Science, University of Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.

Jan Schroeder (J)

Department of Sports and Exercise Medicine, Institute of Human Movement Science, University of Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.

Stefan Dalichau (S)

BG Ambulanz Bremen, Bremen, Germany.

Rüdiger Reer (R)

Department of Sports and Exercise Medicine, Institute of Human Movement Science, University of Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.

Daniel Engel (D)

German Social Accident Insurance Institution for the Building Trade (Headquarter), Berlin, Germany.

Anette Wahl-Wachendorf (A)

German Social Accident Insurance Institution for the Building Trade (Headquarter), Berlin, Germany.
Occupational Health Service of the German Social Accident Insurance Institution for the Building Trade, Berlin, Germany.

Thomas Solbach (T)

German Social Accident Insurance Institution for the Building Trade (Headquarter), Berlin, Germany.
Occupational Health Service of the German Social Accident Insurance Institution for the Building Trade, Berlin, Germany.

Christopher Edler (C)

Department of Sports and Rehabilitation Medicine, BG Trauma Hospital of Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.
BG Rehabilitation Center City Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.

Helge Riepenhof (H)

Department of Sports and Rehabilitation Medicine, BG Trauma Hospital of Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.
BG Rehabilitation Center City Hamburg, Hamburg, Germany.

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