Osteo Arthritis Knee Clinical Trial
Official title:
Novel Pre-Surgery Exercise-Conditioning in Patients Waiting for Total Knee Arthroplasty (TKA)
Total knee replacement (TKR) is the treatment of choice for patients suffering from long standing severe pain, functional limitation and instability caused by osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee joint's surfaces. Long standing arthritic joint surfaces, more often lead to pain and swelling and other physical factors that may contribute to knee joint instability. This instability causes a feeling of 'unsteadiness' whilst walking and may also contribute to falls. In view of the latter, it is important for this issue of 'unsteadiness' to be addressed. TKR helps to remove the cause of pain and swelling, but exercises are crucial to counteract the joint' instability and any feeling of 'unsteadiness' before and after surgery. However, research hasn't yet identified the optimum approach for delivering exercises that will help in patients' rehabilitation. Current studies have tried to incorporate rehabilitation programmes to improve this issue, but required a delivery of 6-8 weeks of exercises which has resulted in a logistical burden in view of the long duration. We have scientifically developed a new programme of exercise for the muscles of the knee that can be delivered during a single week prior to surgery. The pre-surgery exercise-programme (P-SEC), potentially offers similar effectiveness for improving the feeling of 'unsteadiness' and muscle' fitness as programmes that last much longer. Therefore, the purpose of this research study is to test the effectiveness of this new, short approach to exercising in patients who are waiting for a TKR surgery.
Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) is the treatment of choice for patients suffering from severe
pain and functional limitation caused by osteoarthritis (OA) of the knee joint's surfaces
(Magee et al. 2009). Within the UK, over 60,000 TKA surgeries are registered yearly (NJR
2015), making TKA one of the most common surgeries of the joint. Rehabilitation following
surgery is essential for recovery and with TKA this is crucial in regaining movement,
function and control. Current rehabilitation mainly focuses on post-surgery rehabilitation to
increase range of motion (ROM) and muscle power, and to aid in achieving a quick return to
functional independence for patients. Despite this, research has shown that patients
undergoing TKA, still continue to experience reduced capacities in neuromuscular responses
which are required for quick knee joint reactions, stability and proprioception, up to months
following TKA surgery (Silva et al. 2003). A deficit in an individual's knee joint
proprioception (synonymously referred to as a deficit in sensorimotor performance), together
with impaired strength, can lead to reduced functional balance capabilities and movement
control (Piva et al. 2010; Rätsepsoo et al. 2011), and can also contribute to injury (Lephart
et al. 1997) and a greater risk of falls (Swinkels et al. 2009; Bade et al. 2010; Rätsepsoo
et al. 2011). In part, the latter may be due to time-constraints within the health-care
system, where a necessary preservation of the primary focus, to decrease pain and improve
general function in patients following a TKA, has sometimes been to the detriment of other
aspects of rehabilitation.
Pre-surgery exercise-conditioning:
Studies have investigated the effects of pre-surgery exercise' (also known as
pre-habilitation exercise) interventions on strength and sensorimotor performance deficits in
patients undergoing TKA, through various modes of exercise. Their aim has been to utilise a
period of time pre-surgery to improve patients' rehabilitation status (Huber et al. 2015;
Topp et al. 2009; Desmueles et al. 2013; Mackay et al. 2012). However, the patterns of
patients' adaptations to the generic exercise stimuli used within these studies, has not
shown the gains that had been expected by physiological dose-response, and ultimately
questioned the efficacy of using pre-habilitation for effective gains in long-term outcomes.
Nevertheless, the concept of achieving early gains to conditioning status that might
potentiate patients' later rehabilitation processes and status, remains attractive to the
latter (Calatayud et al. 2016, Huber et al. 2015) and the NHS (Rooks et al. 2006; Crowe and
Henderson, 2003).
Conditioning for enhanced sensorimotor performance has been consistently endorsed in the
sports-medical and sports-performance (Hubscher et al. 2010; Mandelbaum et al. 2005) and
clinical literature (Tsao et al. 2007; Granacher et al. 2006) for its causal relationship to
reduced injury likelihood and capability to improve function. While the precise dose of
stimuli to achieve gains in sensorimotor performance is less clearly defined, enhancing motor
performance by means of exercise that resist the effects of gravity or externally-applied
loading to a joint system, has established underpinnings physiologically by improving motor
performance and indirectly effecting sensorimotor responses (Vikne et al. 2006; Hakan et al.
2002; Moran et al. 2007). Clinically, the challenge has been to formulate a suitably
pragmatic programme of conditioning that will accommodate the time- and cost-pressures
associated with contemporary care practice while simultaneously offering efficacy when
delivered prior to surgery as a pre-habilitative intervention. Rehabilitative and
prophylactic conditioning programmes used in current studies for enhanced neuromuscular and
sensorimotor performance, have typically required and been delivered in a duration of
6-8-weeks (Calatayud et al. 2016; Huber et al. 2015; Topp et al. 2009; Desmueles et al. 2013;
Mackay et al. 2012). This has commanded a substantive logistical burden to elicit expected
gains.
A novel approach to conditioning - Development of the P-SEC protocol:
A novel formulation of conditioning that could condense the pattern of delivery of
physiologically-effective, dose-related stimuli, while simultaneously maintaining the vast
proportion of potential gains in performance, would offer advantages to patients and
clinicians for logistical versatility with which a package of conditioning might be
delivered. This would be especially important within the relatively short period of time
between the patients electing for surgery after clinical consultation and a surgical
procedure, if pre-habilitation were to be incorporated effectively within care pathways.
Recent studies have shown that with careful periodization and micro-cyclical management of
the mode of exercise-conditioning, patterning of exercise intensity and work/recovery ratios,
and progression of increasing physiological stimuli for adaptation, it is possible to deliver
gains in neuromuscular performance within a programme lasting 2-3-weeks, which match 70% of
the effects expected during longer programmes (Peer and Gleeson, in press; Peer et al. under
review). Additional adaptations to this intervention model would be needed to counteract
arthrogenic and autogenic sources of inhibition associated with long-term disease conditions
such as OA (Rice et al. 2010), limiting neuromuscular performance and conditioning gains by
the intrusion of nociceptive stimuli such as an increase in intra-articular joint pressure
(Palmieri-Smith et al. 2007). The cost-neutrality of the embedding pre-habilitative
conditioning for improved motor performance might be feasible if a portion of the end-phase
rehabilitation following a surgical procedure, which has been shown recently to offer limited
gains in performance within the formal care pathway (Bailey et al. 2014), could be sacrificed
in favour of an equivalent time- period of conditioning prior to surgery.
Therefore, the purpose of the P-SEC study is to undertake a randomized controlled feasibility
trial in order to investigate the effects of this new formulation of exercise-conditioning
for motor performance on objectively-measured and patient-perceived sensorimotor, functional
and psychophysiological performance capacities in patients waiting for a TKA.
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