AI Article Synopsis

  • Knee osteoarthritis (KOA) is the most common type of osteoarthritis, diagnosed through clinical assessment and knee X-rays, and is influenced by various prognostic and risk factors like age, BMI, and physical activity.
  • A study at the University Emergency Hospital in Bucharest included 70 KOA patients, examining those needing surgical vs. non-surgical treatments based on specific criteria, focusing on patients over 45 with knee pain and radiographic evidence of KOA.
  • Results showed that patients requiring total knee arthroplasty (TKA) were significantly older than those needing other treatments, with a notable difference in age and a higher prevalence of KOA in women.

Article Abstract

Introduction Knee osteoarthritis (KOA) is the most common form of osteoarthritis. It is diagnosed based on clinical symptoms, physical examination, and imaging, most frequently by knee X-ray in at least two views. In front of a patient with early KOA, all the predictive factors and risk factors that can be modified, but also that can lead to a rapid evolution of the symptoms and the need for total knee arthroplasty (TKA), must be taken into account and identified. There were a series of prognostic factors associated with KOA, such as age, sex, BMI, degree of physical activity, decrease in bone mineral density, C-reactive protein, malalignment, clinical severity at baseline, and previous traumas. The treatment of KOA is varied and involves pharmacological and non-pharmacological measures and surgical treatment in the final stages of evolution. Materials and methods In the University Emergency Hospital of Bucharest, Bucharest, Romania, patients with KOA presented to the Department of Orthopedics and Traumatology, and those who required surgical treatment, such as TKA, arthroscopy, or non-surgical treatment, were enrolled. We conducted a descriptive and prospective observational study that included 70 patients clinically and imaging diagnosed with KOA. The inclusion criteria consisted of a patient over 45 years old with knee pain and radiological signs of KOA. The exclusion criteria referred to patients with recent traumatic history, signs of active osteoarticular infection, the lack of radiological changes of KOA that imposed the differential diagnosis, patients known to have rheumatological diseases in the Algic phase, and patients in whom it was not possible to collect complete required data. Results Patients who required TKA were older (65.12 ± 8.19 years) than patients who required other therapeutic interventions (52.55 ± 3.63 years), the difference of 12.57 years being statistically significant (t = -8.882, p ≤ 0.001). Women were more than three times more likely to require TKA than men (80.85% vs. 52.17%, OR = 3.87, CI [1.29, 11.56]). Patients with HBP were more than four times more likely to require TKA than patients without HBP (78.57% vs. 42.86%, OR = 4.88, CI [1.42, 16.82]). Patients with elevated ESR were more than 26 times more likely to require TKA than patients with normal ESR (96.67% vs. 52.50%, OR = 26.23, CI [3.25, 211.67]). There are statistically significant differences between the non-TKA group (mean rank = 60.20) and TKA patients' score (mean rank = 25.62) (U = 6.000, Z = -6.606, p ≤ 0.001). Thus, patients who required TKA had a significantly lower KSS score than patients who required other treatments. Conclusion According to the data obtained in the studied group of patients, the characteristics of the patient at high risk of requiring TKA are the following: a female patient over 65 years of age who associates hypertension, high ESR, and fibrinogen values ​​with KSS score and KSS function with low values, recording an average value of 56.70.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11416154PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7759/cureus.67519DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

patients required
16
patients
14
times require
12
require tka
12
tka
9
predictive factors
8
total knee
8
knee arthroplasty
8
observational study
8
koa
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!