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Joint
Replacement may improve Osteoarthritis
Symptoms in Older Adults
Newswise — Older adults who have hip or knee
replacement surgery for severe
osteoarthritis may take several weeks to
recover but appear to have excellent
long-term outcomes, according to a report in
the July 14 issue of Archives of Internal
Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals.
As the U.S. population ages, the number of
older adults with osteoarthritis is
increasing, according to background
information in the article.
The disease causes debilitating pain and
often restricts older adults’ mobility.
Non-invasive treatments such as medications
and physical therapy appear to be of limited
value for the advanced stages of
osteoarthritis. However, surgery may be
associated with risks and discomfort.
Mary Beth Hamel, M.D., M.P.H., and
colleagues at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical
Center, Boston, studied medical
decision-making and treatment outcomes in
174 patients age 65 and older (average age
75.2) who had severe osteoarthritis of the
hip or knee.
Participants’ arthritis symptoms and
functional status were assessed at the
beginning of the study, between 2001 and
2004, and again 12 months later.
Patients who chose to have joint replacement
surgery were assessed six weeks, six months
and 12 months after the procedure.
During 12 months of follow-up, 51 patients
(29 percent) had joint replacement surgery,
including 30 knee and 21 hip replacements.
None of these patients died, 17 percent had
postoperative complications and 38 percent
had pain lasting more than four weeks
following surgery.
Patients age 75 and older took about the
same amount of time to return to regular
activities as those age 65 to 74, with most
patients requiring assistance with
activities such as shopping and household
chores for more than a month.
At the 12-month mark, scores on scales
measuring osteoarthritis symptoms improved
more significantly in patients who had
surgery than in patients who did not have
surgery.
Close to half (45 percent) of patients who
did not have surgery reported that surgery
was not offered to them as a potential
treatment.
Participants who did not have surgery tended
to be older, have lower incomes and be more
worried about surgical complications and a
long recovery than those who did have
surgery.
“Our findings of excellent outcomes from
joint replacement surgery in elderly
patients with severe hip or knee
osteoarthritis corroborate and extend the
findings of previous studies,” the authors
conclude.
“These data should help inform discussion
about joint replacement surgery and allow
patients to consider the risks and benefits
of surgery as well as the expected
postoperative recovery experience.”
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