Article

Walking Program Boosts Physical Function After Hip Surgery for Osteoarthritis

Patients who receive walking skills training after total hip arthroplasty for osteoarthritis show improved physical function.

Patients who receive walking skills training after total hip arthroplasty for osteoarthritis show improved physical function. There is a positive effect on walking distance and stair climbing that may continue for 12 months postsurgery.

Heiberg and colleagues recruited 68 patients undergoing total hip arthroplasty to investigate the effects of a walking skills training program on walking, stair climbing, balance, physical function, and pain. Patients were randomized to a training group or a control group. The training group engaged in 12 sessions twice a week led by a physical therapist. Each session, performed only in weight-bearing positions, included sitting to standing, walking over obstacles, walking with turns, and climbing stairs.

At 5 months after surgery, patients in the walking program displayed significant improvement in physical performance measures and self-reported physical functioning compared with the control group; 66% of patients in the training group and 15% in the control group improved their walking distance to 50 m (164 ft) or more. At 12 months, the training group showed greater improvement in walking distance and stair climbing abilities than the control group.

The authors noted that their findings suggest that physical rehabilitation helps improve mobility and function in patients who received hip replacements.

Related Videos
Orrin Troum, MD: Accurately Imaging Gout With DECT Scanning
John Stone, MD, MPH: Continuing Progress With IgG4-Related Disease Research
Philip Conaghan, MBBS, PhD: Investigating NT3 Inhibition for Improving Osteoarthritis
Rheumatologists Recognize the Need to Create Pediatric Enthesitis Scoring Tool
Presence of Diffuse Cutaneous Disease Linked to Worse HRQOL in Systematic Sclerosis
Alexei Grom, MD: Exploring Safer Treatment Options for Refractory Macrophage Activation Syndrome
Jack Arnold, MBBS, clinical research fellow, University of Leeds, Leeds Institute of Rheumatic and Musculoskeletal Medicine
John Tesser, MD, Adjunct Assistant Professor of Medicine, Midwestern University, and Arizona College of Osteopathic Medicine, and Lecturer, University of Arizona Health Sciences Center, and Arizona Arthritis & Rheumatology Associates
Gaith Noaiseh, MD: Nipocalimab Improves Disease Measures, Reduces Autoantibodies in Sjogren’s
Laure Gossec, MD, PhD: Informing Physician Treatment Choices for Psoriatic Arthritis
© 2024 MJH Life Sciences

All rights reserved.