Abstract
Background: This study aimed to know which variables most contribute to the functioning acquired in the third month using the Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index (WOMAC) and a multivariate analysis through classification and regression tree (CRT), comparing the conventional instrumentation (CI), and patient-specific instrumentation (PSI). Methods: This is an observational and retrospective study. The sample consisted of 252 patients, 68 receiving CI (27.0%) and 184 receiving PSI (73.0%). The functional variables of the study were: knee pain, passive flexion and extension, gait distance and the domains of the WOMAC index. Results: The CRT method identified that the only explanatory variable that contributed to the highest functioning in the CI group (13.2 in the WOMAC) was pain in the third month with a value ≤2.5 in the visual analog scale (VAS). In the PSI group, the variable that best explained functioning was pain in the first postoperative month (VAS ≤4.5), with the best functional result (2.8 in WOMAC) referring to the patients who walked >320.5 m in the 6-minute walk test in the first month and who had flexion of >112.5 in the third month. Conclusions: Feeling pain is the variable with the most significant explanatory power for the results achieved in functioning at the third month, regardless of the arthroplasty instrumentation employed. Moving the knee in higher flexion ranges and obtaining higher mean values of gait speed also positively influences functioning in patients subjected to PSI.
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