Department of Physical Therapy and Athletic Training, College of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, Sargent College, Boston University, 685 Commonwealth Avenue, Boston, MA 02115, USA.
Phys Ther. 2011 Dec;91(12):1849-56. doi: 10.2522/ptj.20100385. Epub 2011 Oct 14.
The majority of interventions for knee osteoarthritis aim to reduce knee pain with the assumption that improvements in function will automatically follow. However, this assumption is not universally true, and a paradoxical decline in function is not uncommon following reduction in knee pain.
The purpose of this study was to examine what factors beyond knee pain are important for functional decline among people with reductions in knee pain.
This was an observational cohort study.
The Multicenter Osteoarthritis Study (MOST) is a National Institutes of Health-funded longitudinal study of people who have or are at high risk for knee osteoarthritis. This study included individuals who had a meaningful reduction in pain in either knee over 30 months, defined as a 41% decrease in visual analog scale pain score with an absolute decrease of ≥20/100. Meaningful decline in walking speed was defined as a decrease of 0.1 m/s during a 20-m walk. To examine the association of risk factors with meaningful decline in walking speed, risk ratios were calculated and adjusted for potential confounders.
Of the 465 people with a meaningful reduction in knee pain (mean [SD] age=63.3 [7.8] years, 67% female, 82% Caucasian, mean [SD] body mass index=31.3 [6.3] kg/m(2)), 20% had a meaningful decline in walking speed. Adjusting for confounders, participants with new comorbidity and those with widespread pain had 1.8 and 1.7 times the risk of decline compared with their counterparts with no comorbidity or widespread pain (adjusted risk ratio=1.8 [95% confidence interval=1.1-3.0] and 1.7 [95% confidence interval=1.1-2.8], respectively).
Generalizability is limited to people with a reduction in knee pain.
Reductions in knee pain are not always accompanied by improvements in walking speed. Health providers should consider that the onset of new comorbidity and presence of widespread pain may increase the risk of functional decline despite a reduction in knee pain.
大多数膝关节骨关节炎的干预措施旨在减轻膝关节疼痛,假设功能的改善将自动随之而来。然而,这种假设并非普遍正确,膝关节疼痛减轻后,功能反而下降的情况并不少见。
本研究旨在探讨膝关节疼痛减轻人群中,除了膝关节疼痛之外,哪些因素对功能下降很重要。
这是一项观察性队列研究。
多中心骨关节炎研究(MOST)是一项由美国国立卫生研究院资助的研究,针对有或处于膝关节骨关节炎高风险的人群。本研究纳入了在 30 个月内膝关节疼痛有明显减轻的个体,定义为视觉模拟量表疼痛评分下降 41%,绝对值下降≥20/100;20m 行走速度明显下降定义为行走速度下降 0.1m/s。为了研究危险因素与行走速度明显下降的关系,计算了风险比,并对潜在混杂因素进行了调整。
在 465 名膝关节疼痛明显减轻的患者(平均[标准差]年龄 63.3[7.8]岁,67%为女性,82%为白种人,平均[标准差]体重指数 31.3[6.3]kg/m²)中,有 20%出现了行走速度明显下降。调整混杂因素后,新发合并症和广泛性疼痛患者与无合并症或广泛性疼痛患者相比,发生下降的风险分别增加了 1.8 倍和 1.7 倍(调整后的风险比分别为 1.8[95%置信区间 1.1-3.0]和 1.7[95%置信区间 1.1-2.8])。
推广性仅限于膝关节疼痛减轻的人群。
膝关节疼痛的减轻并不总是伴随着行走速度的改善。尽管膝关节疼痛减轻,但新合并症的发生和广泛性疼痛的存在可能会增加功能下降的风险。