Course and Predictors of Pain and Physical Functioning in Patients with Hip Osteoarthritis: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis
Rooij, M. D., van der Leeden, M., Heymans, M. W., Holla, J. F., Häkkinen, A., Lems, W. F., Roorda, L. D., Veenhof, C., Sanchez-Ramirez, D. C., Vet, H. C. D., & Dekker, J. (2016). Course and Predictors of Pain and Physical Functioning in Patients with Hip Osteoarthritis: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis. Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 48(3), 245-252. https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-2057
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Journal of Rehabilitation MedicineAuthors
Date
2016Copyright
© 2016 The Authors. Journal Compilation © 2016 Foundation of Rehabilitation Information. Published in this repository with the kind permission of the publisher.
Objective: To systematically summarize the literature on: (i)
the course of pain and physical functioning; and (ii) predictors
of deterioration of pain and physical functioning in patients
with osteoarthritis of the hip.
Methods: A literature search was conducted in PubMed,
CINAHL, Embase, PsychINFO and SPORTDiscus up to
July 2015. Meta-analyses and qualitative data syntheses
were performed.
Results: Eleven of the 15 included studies were of high quality.
With regard to the course of pain and physical functioning,
high heterogeneity was found across studies (I2
>71%)
and within study populations (reflected by large standard
deviations of change scores). Therefore, the course of pain
and physical functioning was interpreted to be indistinct.
Clinical characteristics (higher comorbidity count and presence
of knee osteoarthritis), health behaviour factors (no
supervised exercise and physical inactivity) and socio-demographics
(lower education) were found to predict deterioration
of pain (weak evidence). Higher comorbidity count and
lower vitality were found to predict deterioration of physical
functioning (strong evidence). For several other predictive
factors weak evidence was found (e.g. bilateral hip pain, increase
in hip pain (change), bilateral knee pain, presence of
knee osteoarthritis).
Conclusion: Because of high heterogeneity across studies
and within study populations, no conclusions can be drawn
with regard to the course of pain and physical functioning.
Several clinical characteristics, health behaviours and psychosocial
factors prognosticate deterioration of pain and
physical functioning. These findings may guide future research
aimed at the identification of subgroups of patients
with hip osteoarthritis.
...
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Stiftelsen RehabiliteringsinformationISSN Search the Publication Forum
1650-1977Keywords
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