Cho Nam Soon, Hwang Ji Hye, Chang Hyun Jung, Koh Eun Mi, Park Hae Soo
Department of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Samsung Medical Center, Sungkyunkwan University School of Medicine, Seoul, Korea.
Clin Rehabil. 2009 Jun;23(6):512-21. doi: 10.1177/0269215508101737. Epub 2009 Apr 29.
To determine the effects of specialized shoes with insoles in patients with rheumatoid arthritis and the differences in terms of type of insole and anatomical location of foot pathology.
Single-blinded randomized controlled trial.
Outpatients of physical medicine and rehabilitation clinic at university hospital.
Forty-two patients with rheumatoid foot lesions were randomly assigned to two different orthotic intervention groups. The anatomical locations of the foot lesions were recorded (hindfoot or forefoot).
Participants were provided with an extra deep forefoot-rockered shoe and either a custom-made semi-rigid insole or a ready-made simple soft insole. They wore the provided footwear for at least 3 hours a day over six months.
Primary outcome measures were foot pain visual analogue scale (VAS) scores and Foot Function Index (FFI). Secondary outcome measures were erythrocyte sedimentation rate and C-reactive protein levels in blood, amounts of medications and active joint counts. These were checked at baseline and post intervention.
Eight patients dropped out at follow-up after six months of treatment. At six-month follow-ups, VAS scores and total Foot Function Index scores had decreased significantly in both groups versus baseline but intergroup comparison showed no significant differences in view of type of insoles and anatomical locations of foot pathology.
We were unable to identify differences between the types of insoles in terms of their clinical effects or between anatomical locations of foot lesions in the two groups, but both groups improved. Therapeutic shoes plus soft insoles might be effective enough in terms of foot pain and foot function for specific patients with rheumatoid foot problems regardless of the location of foot pathology.
确定带有鞋垫的特制鞋对类风湿性关节炎患者的影响,以及鞋垫类型和足部病理解剖位置方面的差异。
单盲随机对照试验。
大学医院物理医学与康复诊所的门诊患者。
42例患有类风湿性足部病变的患者被随机分配到两个不同的矫形干预组。记录足部病变的解剖位置(后足或前足)。
为参与者提供一双前足深度加大的摇椅式鞋子,并配备定制的半刚性鞋垫或现成的简单柔软鞋垫。他们每天至少穿着所提供的鞋具3小时,持续6个月。
主要观察指标为足部疼痛视觉模拟量表(VAS)评分和足部功能指数(FFI)。次要观察指标为血液中的红细胞沉降率和C反应蛋白水平、药物用量及活动关节计数。在基线和干预后进行检查。
治疗6个月后随访时,有8例患者退出。在6个月的随访中,两组的VAS评分和总足部功能指数评分与基线相比均显著降低,但组间比较显示,在鞋垫类型和足部病理解剖位置方面无显著差异。
我们未能确定两组在鞋垫临床效果方面或足部病变解剖位置方面的差异,但两组均有改善。对于患有类风湿性足部问题的特定患者,无论足部病理位置如何,治疗鞋加柔软鞋垫在足部疼痛和足部功能方面可能足够有效。