The Recovery of Weight-Bearing Symmetry After Total Hip Arthroplasty Is Activity-Dependent.

Front Bioeng Biotechnol

Berlin Institute of Health at Charité-Universitätsmedizin Berlin, Julius Wolff Institute, Berlin, Germany.

Published: February 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigated how patients recovering from total hip arthroplasty (THA) regain weight-bearing symmetry (WBS) and ipsilateral loading during daily activities, using specialized insoles.
  • Measurements were taken at four specific times in the THA group, allowing for a comparison to a control group, showing that significant improvements were noted primarily in standing comfortably and sit-to-stand-to-sit transitions.
  • While THA patients reached similar levels of ipsilateral loading and WBS to healthy individuals by 6-12 weeks post-surgery, walking still showed some deficits, indicating the need for pre-operative assessments to fully capture individual recovery progress.

Article Abstract

This study aimed to characterize ipsilateral loading and return to weight-bearing symmetry (WBS) in patients undergoing total hip arthroplasty (THA) during activities of daily living (ADLs) using instrumented insoles. A prospective study in 25 THA patients was performed, which included controlled pre- and postoperative follow-ups in a single rehabilitation center of an orthopedic department. Ipsilateral loading and WBS of ADLs were measured with insoles in THA patients and in a healthy control group of 25 participants. Measurements in the THA group were performed at 4 different visits: a week pre-THA, within a week post-THA, 3-6 weeks post-THA, and 6-12 weeks post-THA, whereas the healthy control group was measured once. ADLs included standing comfortably, standing evenly, walking, and sit-to-stand-to-sit (StS) transitions. All ADLs were analyzed using discrete methods, and walking included a time-scale analysis to provide temporal insights in the ipsilateral loading and WBS waveforms. THA patients only improved beyond their pre-surgery levels while standing comfortably (ipsilateral loading and WBS, < 0.05) and during StS transitions (WBS, < 0.05). Nevertheless, patients improved upon their ipsilateral loading and WBS deficits observed within a week post-surgery across all investigated ADLs. Ipsilateral loading and WBS of THA patients were comparable to healthy participants at 6-12 weeks post-THA, except for ipsilateral loading during walking ( < 0.05) at the initial and terminal double-leg support period of the stance phase. Taken together, insole measurements allow for the quantification of ipsilateral loading and WBS deficits during ADLs, identifying differences between pre- and postoperative periods, and differentiating THA patients from healthy participants. However, post-THA measurements that lack pre-surgery assessments may not be sensitive to identifying patient-specific improvements in ipsilateral loading and WBS. Moreover, StS transitions and earlier follow-up time points should be considered an important clinical metric of biomechanical recovery after THA.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8907721PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fbioe.2022.813345DOI Listing

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