Department of Orthopaedics, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri.
Department of Neurology, Washington University School of Medicine, St. Louis, Missouri.
J Arthroplasty. 2024 Aug;39(8S1):S22-S26. doi: 10.1016/j.arth.2024.03.065. Epub 2024 Apr 8.
Sleep disturbances are common after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Despite the rising popularity of wearables to track sleep, little evidence exists in the arthroplasty literature regarding their efficacy. We aimed to correlate validated wearable sleep metrics with patient-reported sleep quality following TKA.
Patients undergoing primary TKA were consecutively enrolled. Patients used a wearable device preoperatively and 90 days postoperatively to track five previously-validated measures of sleep. Each month, they rated their sleep quality. Wearable sleep data was correlated with patient-reported sleep quality using a point biserial correlation test. Categorical data were compared using Chi-square tests. A total of 110 patients were included.
Preoperatively, 20.8% of patients reported "fairly bad" or "very bad" sleep; this increased to 44.4% 30 days postoperatively, then decreased to 26.5% 60 days postoperatively, and to 20.2% 90 days postoperatively. At 30 days postoperatively, time in bed, time asleep, and minutes of rapid eye movement sleep weakly correlated with patient-reported sleep quality (correlations 0.356, 0.345, and 0.345, respectively; P < .001). Sleep quality did not correlate with any wearable metric collected 60 or 90 days postoperatively.
Patient-reported sleep quality following TKA initially worsened postoperatively, then improved to preoperative levels by 90 days. Time in bed, time asleep, and rapid eye movement sleep minutes only weakly correlated with patient-reported sleep quality at 30 days; no other correlations were detected. Surgeons that utilize remote monitoring following TKA should be aware that surrogate measures generated from these devices may correlate weakly, if at all, with the patient-reported outcome of the parameter being studied.
全膝关节置换术(TKA)后常出现睡眠障碍。尽管可穿戴设备在跟踪睡眠方面越来越受欢迎,但在关节置换文献中几乎没有关于其疗效的证据。我们旨在将经过验证的可穿戴睡眠指标与 TKA 后患者报告的睡眠质量相关联。
连续纳入接受初次 TKA 的患者。患者在术前和术后 90 天使用可穿戴设备跟踪五项先前验证的睡眠指标。每个月,他们都会评估自己的睡眠质量。使用点二项相关系数检验将可穿戴睡眠数据与患者报告的睡眠质量相关联。使用卡方检验比较分类数据。共纳入 110 例患者。
术前,20.8%的患者报告“相当差”或“非常差”的睡眠;术后 30 天增加到 44.4%,然后降至术后 60 天的 26.5%,术后 90 天降至 20.2%。术后 30 天,卧床时间、入睡时间和快速眼动睡眠分钟数与患者报告的睡眠质量呈弱相关(相关系数分别为 0.356、0.345 和 0.345;P<.001)。术后 60 天或 90 天,睡眠质量与任何可穿戴指标均无相关性。
TKA 后患者报告的睡眠质量最初在术后恶化,然后在 90 天内恢复到术前水平。卧床时间、入睡时间和快速眼动睡眠分钟数仅在术后 30 天与患者报告的睡眠质量呈弱相关;未检测到其他相关性。在 TKA 后使用远程监测的外科医生应注意,这些设备生成的替代指标可能与所研究参数的患者报告结果相关度较低(如果有的话)。