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Link to original content: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22559793
The effects of knee arthroplasty on walking speed: a meta-analysis - PubMed Skip to main page content
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Review
. 2012 May 6:13:66.
doi: 10.1186/1471-2474-13-66.

The effects of knee arthroplasty on walking speed: a meta-analysis

Affiliations
Review

The effects of knee arthroplasty on walking speed: a meta-analysis

Hamid Abbasi-Bafghi et al. BMC Musculoskelet Disord. .

Abstract

Background: Patients with knee osteoarthritis patients have problems with walking, and tend to walk slower. An important aim of knee arthroplasty is functional recovery, which should include a post-operative increase in walking speed. Still, there are several problems with measuring walking speed in groups of knee osteoarthritis patients. Nevertheless, test-retest reliability of walking speed measurements is high, and when the same investigators monitor the same subjects, it should be possible to assess the walking speed effects of knee arthroplasty. The present study reports a meta-analysis of these effects.

Methods: A total of 16 independent pre-post arthroplasty comparisons of walking speed were identified through MEDLINE, Web of Science, and PEDro, in 12 papers, involving 419 patients.

Results: For 0.5-5 months post-operatively, heterogeneity was too large to obtain a valid estimate of the overall effect-size. For 6-12 and 13-60 months post-operatively, heterogeneity was absent, low, or moderate (depending on estimated pre-post correlations). During these periods, subjects walked on average 0.8 standard-deviations faster than pre-operatively, which is a large effect. Meta-regression analysis revealed significant effects of time and time squared, suggesting initial improvement followed by decline.

Conclusion: This meta-analysis revealed a large effect of arthroplasty on walking speed 6-60 months post-operatively. For the first 0.5-5 months, heterogeneity of effect-sizes precluded a valid estimate of short-term effects. Hence, patients may expect a considerable improvement of their walking speed, which, however, may take several months to occur. Meta-regression analysis suggested a small decline from 13 months post-operatively onwards.

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Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Study selection [23].
Figure 2
Figure 2
Effect-sizes (vertical axis) against time (horizontal axis) in all comparisons; of the 29 comparisons, 16 were independent.
Figure 3
Figure 3
Walking speed effect-sizes in the first 0.5–5 months after knee arthroplasty with mean values (◊) and 95% confidence intervals (horizontal error bars); given the large between-study variance, no valid overall estimate was possible; note that Weidenheim [39] followed two different groups.
Figure 4
Figure 4
Walking speed effect-sizes 6–12 months after knee arthroplasty; bottom lines: overall effect-sizes, 95% CI 0.68–1.00 (with 9b), or 0.67–0.99 (with 9c).
Figure 5
Figure 5
Walking speed effect-sizes 13–60 months after knee arthroplasty; overall effect-size, 95% CI 0.52–1.12; note that Berman [41] followed two different groups.

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