Litcius/Paper detail

Wearable activity sensors and early pain after total joint arthroplasty

Joseph T. Patterson, Hao‐Hua Wu, Christopher C. Chung, Ilya Bendich, Jeffrey J. Barry, Stefano A. Bini

2020Arthroplasty Today30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

A prospective observational cohort of 20 primary total hip arthroplasty (n = 12) and total knee arthroplasty (n = 8) patients (mean age: 63 ± 6 years) was passively monitored with a consumer-level wearable activity sensor before and 6 weeks after surgery. Patients were clustered by minimal change or decreased activity using sensor data. Decreased postoperative activity was associated with greater pain reduction (−5.5 vs −2.0, P = .03). All patients surpassed minimal clinical benefit thresholds of total joint arthroplasty (TJA) (Hip Disability and Osteoarthritis Score Junior 30.5 vs 20.8, P = .23; Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score Junior 23.3 vs 18.2, P = .77) within 6 weeks. Patients who objectively “take it easy” after TJA may experience less pain with no difference in early subjective outcome. Remote, passive analysis of outpatient wearable sensor data may permit real-time detection of early problems after TJA.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineOsteoarthritisJoint arthroplastyArthroplastyTotal knee arthroplastyPhysical therapyObservational studyProspective cohort studyTotal hip arthroplastyCohortSurgeryInternal medicineAlternative medicinePathologyTotal Knee Arthroplasty OutcomesKnee injuries and reconstruction techniquesMusculoskeletal pain and rehabilitation