Amsterdam Rehabilitation Research Center, Reade, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Amsterdam Rehabilitation Research Center, Reade, Amsterdam, the Netherlands ; VU University Medical Center Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Amsterdam, the Netherlands.
Clin Interv Aging. 2014 May 14;9:829-42. doi: 10.2147/CIA.S55705. eCollection 2014.
Exercise therapy is generally recommended for patients with osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee. Comorbidity, which is highly prevalent in OA, may interfere with exercise therapy. To date, there is no evidence-based protocol for the treatment of patients with knee OA and comorbidity. Special protocols adapted to the comorbidity may facilitate the application of exercise therapy in patients with knee OA and one or more comorbidities.
The purpose of this study was to develop comorbidity-adapted exercise protocols for patients with knee OA and comorbidity.
Several steps were undertaken to develop comorbidity-adapted protocols: selection of highly prevalent comorbidities in OA, a literature search to identify restrictions and contraindications for exercise therapy for the various comorbid diseases, consultation of experts on each comorbid disease, and field testing of the protocol in eleven patients with knee OA and comorbidity.
Based on literature and expert opinion, comorbidity-adapted protocols were developed for highly prevalent comorbidities in OA. Field testing showed that the protocols provided guidance in clinical decision making in both the diagnostic and the treatment phase. Because of overlap, the number of exercise protocols could be reduced to three: one for physiological adaptations (coronary disease, heart failure, hypertension, diabetes type 2, chronic obstructive pulmonary diseases, obesity), one for behavioral adaptations (chronic a-specific pain, nonspecific low back pain, depression), and one for environmental adaptations (visual or hearing impairments). Evaluation of patient outcome after treatment showed significant (P<0.05) and clinically relevant improvements in activity limitations and pain.
Comorbidity-adapted exercise protocols for patients with knee OA were developed, providing guidance in clinical reasoning with regard to diagnostics and treatment. To evaluate the effectiveness of treatment in line with our protocols, a randomized clinical trial should be performed.
运动疗法通常被推荐用于膝关节骨关节炎(OA)患者。合并症在 OA 中非常普遍,可能会干扰运动疗法。迄今为止,尚无针对膝骨关节炎合并症患者的循证治疗方案。适应合并症的特殊方案可能有助于在患有膝骨关节炎和一种或多种合并症的患者中应用运动疗法。
本研究旨在为膝骨关节炎合并症患者制定适应合并症的运动方案。
为制定适应合并症的方案,我们采取了以下几个步骤:选择 OA 中高发的合并症,对各种合并疾病的运动疗法的限制和禁忌进行文献检索,咨询每位合并症专家,在 11 名膝骨关节炎合并症患者中对方案进行现场测试。
根据文献和专家意见,为 OA 中的高发合并症制定了适应合并症的方案。现场测试表明,该方案为诊断和治疗阶段的临床决策提供了指导。由于存在重叠,运动方案的数量可减少至三个:一个用于生理适应(冠心病、心力衰竭、高血压、2 型糖尿病、慢性阻塞性肺病、肥胖),一个用于行为适应(慢性非特异性疼痛、非特异性腰痛、抑郁),一个用于环境适应(视力或听力障碍)。治疗后患者结局的评估显示,活动受限和疼痛有显著(P<0.05)和临床相关的改善。
为膝骨关节炎患者制定了适应合并症的运动方案,为诊断和治疗方面的临床推理提供了指导。为了根据我们的方案评估治疗效果,应进行随机临床试验。