Background
Patients with lumbar spinal stenosis (LSS) may be at high risk of falls due to various factors. No effective fall risk assessments or fall prevention measures have been performed for patients with LSS because only a few studies have evaluated falls in these patients. This study aimed to evaluate the incidence and preoperative predictors of falls within 12 months of surgery in patients with LSS.
Methods
In this prospective study of 82 consecutive preoperative patients with LSS, preoperative demographic data, previous fall history, leg pain, low back pain, Japanese Orthopaedic Association (JOA) score, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) scores, lower extremity muscle strength, walking speed, grip strength, and muscle mass were assessed at baseline. Falls were assessed at 3, 6, 9, and 12 months after surgery. Participants were categorized as fallers and non-fallers and baseline variables were compared. Binomial logistic regression was used to identify predictors of falls within 12 months of surgery.
Results
Seventy-four patients (90.2%) completed the 12-month follow-up after surgery, of whom 24 patients (32.4%) experienced falls. A higher proportion of fallers were female and had a history of falls compared to non-fallers. Fallers had a significantly lower JOA score and a higher HADS-depression score compared to non-fallers. Fallers had significantly lower tibialis anterior muscle strength, gait speed, grip strength, and skeletal muscle mass index. Fallers had a higher prevalence of low muscle mass compared with non-fallers. The presence of low muscle mass was significantly predictive of falls within 12 months of surgery (odds ratio, 4.46; 95% confidence interval, 1.02–19.63).
Conclusions
Patients with LSS have a high incidence of falls after surgery and preoperative low muscle mass may be a predictor of postoperative falls.
ObjectivesThis study aimed to characterize the skeletal muscles of patients who underwent total knee arthroplasty (TKA) using ultrasonography in order to investigate the effectiveness of ultrasonographic skeletal muscle assessment after TKA.MethodsThis study included 50 TKA patients (TKA group) and 41 residents with osteoarthritis who have not received TKA (non-TKA group). Ultrasonography was used to assess the characteristics of several different muscles. Various postoperative outcomes were evaluated. Muscle thickness (MT) and echo intensity (EI) results were compared among operated knees in the TKA group, nonoperated knees in the TKA group, and more severely affected knees in the non-TKA group. For the TKA group, multiple regression was conducted to examine the association between skeletal muscle characteristics of operated knees and postoperative outcomes.ResultsThe MTs of the vastus medialis, vastus intermedius, and rectus femoris (RF) were significantly smaller and the RF-EI was significantly greater for both operated and nonoperated knees in the TKA group compared with the non-TKA group (P < 0.017). Several parameters of physical function were significantly poorer in the TKA group than in the non-TKA group (P < 0.05). Multiple regression demonstrated that RF-MT was associated with knee range of motion, knee strength, and physical functional performance in the TKA group (P < 0.05).ConclusionsThe quantity and quality of skeletal muscles were lower in the TKA group than in the non-TKA group. Ultrasonography may be useful for assessing skeletal muscles in TKA patients because MT assessed with ultrasonography was associated with various parameters of physical function.
Background
The purpose of this study was to investigate whether walking speed is associated with postoperative pain catastrophizing in patients with lumbar spinal stenosis.
Methods
In this prospective observational study, consecutive patients with clinically and radiologically defined lumbar spinal stenosis underwent surgical treatment (decompression, or posterolateral or transforaminal lumbar interbody fusion) at Tottori University Hospital, between October 2015 and April 2018. The pain catastrophizing scale, walking speed, leg and back pain (numerical rating scale), and Japanese Orthopaedic Association score were evaluated preoperatively and at 3, 6, and 12 months postoperatively. Correlations between the pain catastrophizing scale and each variable were analyzed at each evaluation time point. The effect of walking speed on the pain catastrophizing scale was analyzed using mixed-effect models for repeated measurements.
Results
Ninety-four patients were included at baseline, and 83, 88, and 82 patients were analyzed at 3, 6, and 12 months postoperatively, respectively. The pain catastrophizing scale was significantly correlated with walking speed, leg pain, back pain, and the Japanese Orthopaedic Association score at all evaluation time points. The pain catastrophizing scale was associated with walking speed at all evaluation time points.
Conclusions
Our results suggest that changes in postoperative pain catastrophizing after lumbar spine surgery are associated with walking speed. Thus, walking speed is a necessary assessment for the management of pain catastrophizing and associated pain and disability in patients after lumbar spine surgery.
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