Abstract

BackgroundA subgroup of patients continue to report pain with walking 12 months after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). The association between walking pain and self-rated health (SRH) after TKA is not known. This prospective longitudinal study aimed to investigate the association between a comprehensive list of preoperative factors, postoperative pain with walking, and SRH 12 months after TKA.MethodsPatients (N = 156) scheduled for TKA completed questionnaires that evaluated demographic and clinical characteristics, symptoms, psychological factors, and SRH. SRH was re-assessed 12 months after TKA. Clinical variables were retrieved from medical records. Pain with walking was assessed before surgery, at 6 weeks, 3, and 12 months after TKA. Subgroups with distinct trajectories of pain with walking over time were identified using growth mixture modeling. Multiple linear regression was used to investigate the relationships between pain with walking and other factors on SRH.ResultsHigher body mass index, a higher number of painful sites at 12 months, recurrent pain with walking group membership, ketamine use, higher depression scores, and poorer preoperative self-rated health were associated with poorer SRH 12 months after TKA. The final model was statistically significant (p = 0.005) and explained 56.1% of the variance in SRH 12 months after surgery. SRH improved significantly over time. Higher C-reactive protein levels, higher number of painful sites before surgery, higher fatigue severity, and more illness concern was associated with poorer preoperative SRH.ConclusionsIn patients whose walking ability decreases over time, clinicians need to assess for unreleaved pain and decreases in SRH. Additional research is needed on interventions to improve walking ability and SRH.

Highlights

  • A subgroup of patients continue to report pain with walking 12 months after total knee arthroplasty (TKA)

  • Patients in the Recurrent Interference group were characterized by higher preoperative pain, fatigue, and depression scores and poorer illness perceptions compared to Continuous Improvers

  • The current study builds on these results to further investigate how walking outcomes and a comprehensive set of predictors are related to a general health outcome (i.e., self-rated health (SRH) at 12 months after TKA

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Summary

Introduction

A subgroup of patients continue to report pain with walking 12 months after total knee arthroplasty (TKA). The association between walking pain and self-rated health (SRH) after TKA is not known This prospective longitudinal study aimed to investigate the association between a comprehensive list of preoperative factors, postoperative pain with walking, and SRH 12 months after TKA. Poorer self-efficacy with walking skills [6], more preoperative walking limitations, higher body mass index (BMI), slower 1 month gait speed, contralateral knee pain, and use of quadstick before surgery [7] were associated with poorer walking outcomes 6 months after TKA. Patients in the Recurrent Interference group were characterized by higher preoperative pain, fatigue, and depression scores and poorer illness perceptions compared to Continuous Improvers. The current study builds on these results to further investigate how walking outcomes and a comprehensive set of predictors are related to a general health outcome (i.e., self-rated health (SRH) at 12 months after TKA

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