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Need New Knees? Now May Be The Time
Women May Wait Too Long Before Considering Knee Replacement, Study Finds
| Source: AAOS
ROSEMONT, IL--(Marketwire - November 29, 2007) - Women with osteoarthritis of the knee wait
longer than men before pursuing knee replacement surgery, according to a
study published in the November 2007 issue of The Journal of Bone and Joint
Surgery. This delay in treatment may result in poorer post-operative
outcomes for female patients.
More than 300,000 total knee replacements (also known as knee
arthroplasties) are performed in the U.S. each year; about 2/3 of them are
done on women. Total knee replacement is a surgical procedure in which the
patient's natural knee joint is replaced with an artificial one, composed
of metal and plastic; some patients might have a unicompartmental
replacement, in which only a portion of the knee joint is replaced. The
most common reasons for this surgery are severe pain, swelling, and/or
stiffness in the knee, frequently caused by osteoarthritis (OA), a
degenerative disease affecting more than 40 million Americans, which cannot
be satisfactorily treated with medications or other therapies. Patients
might have one or both knees replaced.
The study, which was conducted at the University of Delaware and funded by
the National Institutes of Health, compared the knee strength and function
of healthy men and women with those who are candidates for knee replacement
due to osteoarthritis. While inherent differences in strength and function
were found in the group of healthy individuals, those differences were
greater in the osteoarthritis patients.
"These results suggest that we might be waiting too long to suggest total
knee arthroplasty as a treatment option for women with end-stage knee OA,"
says Stephanie Petterson, MPT, PhD, one of the study's authors and a senior
lecturer at the School of Health and Bioscience at the University of East
London, "or that women with knee OA are waiting too long to access the
appropriate care."
In this study, 95 men and 126 women who were candidates for knee
arthroplasty were compared to 44 healthy men and women who matched them in
gender, age, and body-mass index. These groups were evaluated for knee
range of motion, strength, walking speed, ability to climb stairs, and
other measures.
Healthy men generally had better strength and function than women in most
areas; the healthy women had better scores in voluntary muscle activation
than men. However, in the knee arthroplasty candidates, the women scored
worse than the men in all areas, and the differences were more pronounced
than in the healthy group.
Greater deterioration of the joint can make recovery more difficult;
therefore, the sooner an osteoarthritis patient receives treatment, the
better the outcomes. "The results of this study tell us that we need to do
more to educate this large population of potential patients -- especially
the women -- about the risks and benefits of knee replacement surgery,"
says Leo Raisis, MD, one of the study's authors and an orthopaedic surgeon
at First State Orthopaedics in Newark, DE. "We can partner with physical
therapists to show patients how their condition compares to others. Better
education may bring patients -- especially women -- in for a necessary
surgery earlier so they can return to a better quality of life much
sooner."
To view this release online, go to
http://www.pwrnewmedia.com/2007/aaos112907/index.html.