1. SAT0688 Joint involvement in patients with knee and hip oa scheduled for surgery: multi-joint oa, the rule not the exception?
- Author
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Christian Veillette, Rajiv Gandhi, JD Power, Nizar N. Mahomed, Yoga Raja Rampersaud, Anthony V. Perruccio, Elizabeth M. Badley, Calvin Yip, K. Syed, and John Roderick Davey
- Subjects
musculoskeletal diseases ,medicine.medical_specialty ,WOMAC ,Shoulders ,business.industry ,Osteoarthritis ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,030220 oncology & carcinogenesis ,Hip replacement ,Orthopedic surgery ,medicine ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Ankle ,business ,Stroke ,Depression (differential diagnoses) - Abstract
Background Multijoint involvement in osteoarthritis (OA) has long been documented clinically and in the literature. Even so, the vast majority of OA research has focused on OA in individual joints, particularly the knees, hips or hands. In many “joint-specific” studies, the presence of multijoint symptoms are either ignored or peripherally considered in descriptive and analytical work. The implicit assumption is often that OA is OA, irrespective of whether a single joint or several joints are involved. Objectives To document the occurrence of multijoint symptoms in a clinical sample of individuals with knee and hip OA scheduled for orthopaedic surgery. To examine the joint sites involved and investigate whether the extent of joint involvement is related to demographic and health characteristics. Methods Patients scheduled for total knee or hip replacement for end-stage OA were consecutively recruited from an academic hospital in Toronto, Canada. A health questionnaire completed prior to surgery captured demographic characteristics (age, sex), symptomatic joints other than the surgical joint (right and left shoulders, elbows, wrists, hands, hips, knees, feet, ankle, neck and back), body mass index (BMI), comorbidities (hypertension, depression, diabetes, migraine headaches, cancer, respiratory disease, heart disease, stomach/bowel disease, stroke) and WOMAC hip- and knee-specific pain and function. Results Study questionnaires were completed by 366 hip and 407 knee patients. The mean age of the sample was 65 years (SD=9.2; range 38–89 years), 57% were female. The most frequently reported symptomatic joints among knee patients were the contralateral knee (53.2%), one or both hands (32.1%), and the upper-, mid- or lower-back (31.0%), and among hip patients were one or both knees (49.4%), the back (36.6%), and the contralateral hip (21.3%). The overall mean number of symptomatic joints other than the surgical joint was 3.0 (SD=3.2; range 0–17). Only 19.0% reported the surgical joint as the only symptomatic joint; 23.0% reported 5 or more additional symptomatic joints. Mean hip/knee-specific pain and function scores were significantly worse with increasing symptomatic joint count (p Conclusions In this clinical OA sample, the “average” patient reported multiple symptomatic joints. Increasing age was not associated with increasing frequency of symptomatic joints. Irrespective of age and obesity, multiple symptomatic joints were the rule, not the exception. It was notable that the frequency of co-occurring conditions increased with increasing symptomatic joint count. This may suggest a need to re-examine how OA is characterized and perhaps its underlying etiology as it relates to single vs. multi-joint involvement. Disclosure of Interest None declared
- Published
- 2017
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