Replies to a questionnaire showed that, amongst 180 women delivered in The London Hospital, 48% experienced backache during pregnancy; in one third of these it was severe. The prevalence of back pain increased with both increasing age and increasing parity, and it was difficult to separate the relative contributions of these two factors. No evidence was found of an association between backache during pregnancy and height, weight, 'obesity index', weight gain, or baby's weight. Analysis of aggravating and relieving factors indicates some differences between backache in the pregnant and 'mechanical' back pain in the non-pregnant. Slightly less backache was reported amongst patients attending antenatal physiotherapy classes but the figures do not provide clear evidence of any protective effect of this attendance.
All patients with OA or RA entering an orthopaedic waiting list for total hip or knee replacement surgery over a period of 2.5 yr were prospectively assessed for overall pain (Visual Analogue Scale) and disability (Health Assessment Questionnaire) prior to and following their operation at annual intervals for up to 5 yr. A total of 293 patients had 335 operations (OA, hip 164; OA, knee 76; RA, hip 41; RA, knee 54). A few patients (14) showed a deterioration in pain and function 1 yr after surgery, but the remainder showed improvements which took 1 yr or more to reach maximum and were maintained for at least 3 yr. Although greater for OA hip patients, improvements occurred and were maintained in all groups, in spite of the polyarticular nature of RA.
The joints of 30 rheumatoid arthritis patients were assessed by one observer for signs of inflammation. Computer analysis was then used to calculate 70 different articular indices for each patient. Pearson correlation coefficients were calculated between serum C-reactive protein levels and the articular indices. The results show that: findings in a restricted set of examined joints were equivalent to those in a more complete set; the simultaneous presence of joint tenderness and swelling yielded higher correlation than did either variable alone; and joint "weighting" for size yielded higher correlation than did simple counts.
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