Faculty Health Sciences and Medicine, Bond University Institute of Health and Sport, Robina, QLD, Australia.
Faculty Health Sciences and Medicine, Bond University Institute of Health and Sport, Robina, QLD, Australia; Gold Coast Knee Group, Robina, QLD, Australia.
J Arthroplasty. 2024 Jul;39(7):1685-1691. doi: 10.1016/j.arth.2024.02.002. Epub 2024 Feb 6.
Outpatient physical therapy following total knee arthroplasty (TKA) is often considered crucial for an effective recovery. However, recent evidence suggests that a self-directed pathway may yield similar benefits to supervised care. Despite this, there appear to be no established criteria to determine who can successfully self-direct their rehabilitation versus those who would benefit from outpatient physical therapy. This study aimed to determine if early postoperative criteria can stratify TKA patients into a self-directed or supervised physical therapy pathway without compromising outcomes.
Overall, 60 TKA patients were initially allocated to a self-directed, unsupervised protocol for their postoperative rehabilitation. Baseline demographics, along with functional and self-reported outcomes, were assessed preoperatively and at 2 weeks, 6 weeks, and 4 months following surgery. Patients were referred to supervised outpatient physical therapy if they met any of the following Knee Arthroplasty Physical Therapy Pathways (KAPPA) criteria: (1) knee flexion range of motion <90 degrees; (2) knee extension range of motion lacking >10 degrees; or (3) dissatisfaction with the progress of their rehabilitation.
At 2 weeks post-TKA, 28 participants met the KAPPA criteria for supervised physical therapy for reasons of knee flexion <90 degrees (61%), a lack of knee extension >10 degrees (36%), or not being satisfied with the progress of their recovery (3%). The remaining 32 participants continued with a self-directed rehabilitation pathway. All outcomes assessed favored the self-directed group at 2 weeks, however, after an average of 4 supervised physical therapy sessions at 4 months there were no longer any differences between the 2 groups.
Over half of the included participants could self-direct their rehabilitation following TKA without supervised physical therapy while also maintaining excellent clinical outcomes. For those who met KAPPA criteria at 2 weeks post-TKA, 4 supervised physical therapy sessions appeared to be beneficial when outcomes were reassessed at 4 months.
全膝关节置换术(TKA)后的门诊物理治疗通常被认为对有效康复至关重要。然而,最近的证据表明,自我指导的途径可能会产生与监督护理相似的益处。尽管如此,似乎没有既定的标准来确定谁可以成功地自我指导康复,而谁则受益于门诊物理治疗。本研究旨在确定早期术后标准是否可以将 TKA 患者分层为自我指导或监督物理治疗途径,而不会影响结果。
共有 60 名 TKA 患者最初被分配到自我指导、非监督的术后康复方案中。在术前和术后 2 周、6 周和 4 个月评估基线人口统计学特征以及功能和自我报告结果。如果患者符合以下任何 Knee Arthroplasty Physical Therapy Pathways(KAPPA)标准,则会被转诊到监督门诊物理治疗:(1)膝关节屈曲范围<90 度;(2)膝关节伸展范围丧失>10 度;或(3)对康复进展不满意。
在 TKA 后 2 周,有 28 名参与者因膝关节屈曲<90 度(61%)、膝关节伸展丧失>10 度(36%)或对康复进展不满意(3%)而符合 KAPPA 标准,需要接受监督物理治疗。其余 32 名参与者继续进行自我指导的康复途径。在 2 周时,所有评估的结果都有利于自我指导组,然而,在 4 个月时接受平均 4 次监督物理治疗后,两组之间不再有任何差异。
超过一半的参与者可以在不接受监督物理治疗的情况下自行进行 TKA 后的康复,同时保持出色的临床结果。对于那些在 TKA 后 2 周符合 KAPPA 标准的患者,在 4 个月时重新评估结果时,4 次监督物理治疗似乎是有益的。