Objectives: Physical activity is promoted in patients with hip or knee osteoarthritis (OA), yet little is known about its relationship with symptoms, functional limitations and Quality of Life (QoL... Show moreObjectives: Physical activity is promoted in patients with hip or knee osteoarthritis (OA), yet little is known about its relationship with symptoms, functional limitations and Quality of Life (QoL). We investigated if OA-associated pain, functional limitations and QoL are associated with objectively measured physical activity in patients with end-stage hip/knee OA.Methods: Cross-sectional study including patients scheduled for primary total hip/knee arthroplasty. Patients wore an accelerometer (Activ8) with physical activity assessed over waking hours, and expressed as number of activity daily counts (ADC) per hour, %time spent on physical activity i.e. walking, cycling or running (%PA), and %time spent sedentary (%SB). Pain, functional limitations and joint-specific and general QoL were assessed with the Hip disability/Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (HOOS/KOOS) and the Short Form (SF)-12. Multivariate linear regression models with the three to Z-scores transformed parameters of physical activity as dependent variables and adjusted for confounding, were conducted. Results: 49 hip and 48 knee OA patients were included. In hip and knee OA patients the mean number of ADC, %PA and %SB were 18.79 +/- 7.25 and 21.19 +/- 6.16, 14 +/- 6.4 and 15 +/- 5.0, and 66 +/- 10.5 and 68 +/- 8.7, respectively. In hip OA, better joint-specific and general QoL were associated with more ADC, (13 0.028; 95%CI:0.007-0.048, 130.041; 95%CI:0.010- 0.071). Also, better general QoL was associated with the %PA (13 0.040, 95%CI:0.007- 0.073). No other associations were found.Conclusion: Whereas QoL was associated with physical activity in hip OA, pain and functional limitations were not related to objectively measured physical activity in patients with end-stage hip or knee OA.(c) 2021 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/). Show less
The aims of this thesis were:1. To investigate associations between radiographic OA severity, knee instability, pain and function prior to and after THA and/or TKA.2. To evaluate factors... Show moreThe aims of this thesis were:1. To investigate associations between radiographic OA severity, knee instability, pain and function prior to and after THA and/or TKA.2. To evaluate factors influencing physical activities in patients with end-stage hip or knee OA.3. To identify determinants of return to work after THA or TKA.The research in this thesis showed that the combination of preoperative radiographic OA severity and pain perception of the patient are important predictors for the expected postoperative pain/function outcome due to effect modification. Furthermore, the initial clinical recovery after arthroplasty surgery and preoperative scores can be used during the postoperative recovery period to identify patients at risk for an unfavourable one-year outcome. Besides, it showed that kneeinstability could be considered as an easy identifiable surrogate outcome for poor pain relief and poor function. Furthermore, pain and functional limitations were not associated with an objective technical measurement of physical activity in patients with end-stage hip or knee OA. Finally, we found that preoperative occupational information (more specifically preoperative absence from work) and work-related expectations are important predictors for return to work after THA or TKA. Show less