Tjong Vehniah K, Cogan Charles J, Riederman Brett D, Terry Michael A
Department of Orthopaedic Surgery, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA.
Orthop J Sports Med. 2016 Nov 17;4(11):2325967116671940. doi: 10.1177/2325967116671940. eCollection 2016 Nov.
Hip arthroscopy for femoroacetabular impingement (FAI) is known to produce excellent outcomes, yet some patients do not return to their preinjury level of sport participation. Much literature on return to sport has revolved around anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction and even shoulder instability, but none to date have used qualitative, semistructured patient interviews on patients with hip labral tears.
To understand the factors influencing the decision to return to sport after arthroscopic hip surgery for FAI.
Case series; Level of evidence, 4.
An experienced interviewer conducted qualitative, semistructured interviews of patients aged 18 to 60 years who had arthroscopic hip surgery for FAI. All had preinjury participation in sport and a minimum 2-year follow-up with no revision surgery. Qualitative analysis was then performed to derive codes, categories, and themes. An assessment of preinjury and current sports participation by type, level of competition, and frequency along with patient-reported hip function was also obtained. In addition, current modified Harris Hip Score (mHHS), international Hip Outcome Tool (iHOT-12), Hip Outcome Score-sports-specific subscale (HOS-SSS), and a coping mechanism evaluation (Brief COPE) were also recorded.
A total of 23 patients were interviewed to reveal the overarching themes of internal motivation, external encouragement, and resetting expectations as the predominant factors influencing a patient's decision to return to preinjury sport. Subjective outcome measurements (mHHS, iHOT-12, patient satisfaction) showed significant differences between patients who did and did not return to sport. Interestingly, the adaptive and maladaptive coping mechanisms matched and supported our themes in those patients who described fear and self-motivation as defining features influencing their cessation of or return to play, respectively.
Self-motivation, aging, pain, encouragement from others, and adapting to physical limitations can largely affect a patient's decision to return to sport after arthroscopic hip surgery for FAI. Innate coping mechanisms may also help to predict the course of and subsequently aid in a patient's postoperative recovery.
髋关节镜治疗股骨髋臼撞击症(FAI)的效果良好,但部分患者无法恢复到受伤前的运动参与水平。关于恢复运动的诸多文献主要围绕前交叉韧带重建甚至肩关节不稳定展开,然而迄今为止,尚无针对髋关节盂唇撕裂患者进行定性、半结构化患者访谈的研究。
了解影响FAI关节镜髋关节手术后恢复运动决策的因素。
病例系列研究;证据等级为4级。
由一名经验丰富的访谈者对18至60岁因FAI接受关节镜髋关节手术的患者进行定性、半结构化访谈。所有患者受伤前均参与体育运动,且至少随访2年且未进行翻修手术。随后进行定性分析以得出编码、类别和主题。还获取了按类型、比赛水平和频率对受伤前及当前运动参与情况的评估以及患者报告的髋关节功能。此外,还记录了当前的改良Harris髋关节评分(mHHS)、国际髋关节结果工具(iHOT - 12)、髋关节结果评分 - 运动特定子量表(HOS - SSS)以及应对机制评估(简易应对方式问卷)。
共访谈了23名患者,揭示出内在动力、外部鼓励和重新设定期望是影响患者恢复受伤前运动决策的主要因素。主观结果测量(mHHS、iHOT - 12、患者满意度)显示,恢复运动和未恢复运动的患者之间存在显著差异。有趣的是,适应性和适应不良性应对机制与我们的主题相匹配,并分别在那些将恐惧和自我激励描述为影响其停止或恢复运动的决定性特征的患者中得到了支持。
自我激励、年龄增长、疼痛、他人鼓励以及适应身体限制在很大程度上会影响FAI关节镜髋关节手术后患者恢复运动的决策。内在应对机制也可能有助于预测病程并随后辅助患者术后恢复。