Abstract

Purpose: Patients with knee of osteoarthritis (OA) after surgery had experienced physical function decrease and impact their quality of life. However, they always lack a long-term, home-style, and continuous legs exercise training methods, and rare study to explore the effects on physical recovery and quality of life after exercise training. The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of lower extremity muscle strength training on patients" physical recovery and quality of live underwent total knee replacement.

Methods: The quasi-experimental design was conducted, and using a simple randomize sampling (as patients admission priority order) to collect participants" data. Eligible sample recruited from a hospital in Tainan. Inclusion criteria were above 20 old, and will be received total knee replacement (TKR). Outcome measurements included the Knee injury and osteoarthritis outcome score (KOOS, including pain, symptoms, active daily life [ADL], sport & recreation, and quality of life five subscales), disease related variables, and personal demographics. Participants were distributed into with a lower extremity muscle strength training and the training started before surgery (experimental group, n=100) or with usual care (control group, n=100). The lower extremity strength training was conducted by a nurse practitioner. We examined outcome indicators before surgery (T1) and follow up at two weeks (T2), one month (T3), two months (T4), and three months (T5) after TKR.

Results: The KOOS subscales scores showed that all the two groups" patients experienced physical function (ADL and sport & recreation) and quality of life decreased at the two weeks after received TKR, but all the subscales scores gradually increased from one month to third months after TKR (p < .001). The generalized estimating equation (GEE) tests showed that both group and time were significantly different, indicated that both group patients experienced physical function and quality of life improvement, however, the exercise group physical function and quality of life was early recovery and better than no exercise group physical function and quality of life after TKR.

Conclusion: The study confirmed that after lower extremity muscle strength training exercise helps to improve the quality of life and physical function recovery in patients who undergone TKR. This results recommend for the healthcare staff embed this training into pre-surgical nursing care and patients" discharge plan in care of TKR patient as a continuous daily rehabilitation activity at home.

Author Details

Yu-Hua Lin, PhD, RN; Su-Ying Lee; Chia-Chan Kao

Sigma Membership

Lambda Beta at-Large

Type

Poster

Format Type

Text-based Document

Study Design/Type

N/A

Research Approach

N/A

Keywords:

Muscle Strength Training Exercise, Quality of Life, Total Knee Replacement

Conference Name

28th International Nursing Research Congress

Conference Host

Sigma Theta Tau International

Conference Location

Dublin, Ireland

Conference Year

2017

Rights Holder

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All permission requests should be directed accordingly and not to the Sigma Repository.

All submitting authors or publishers have affirmed that when using material in their work where they do not own copyright, they have obtained permission of the copyright holder prior to submission and the rights holder has been acknowledged as necessary.

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Proxy-submission

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Effects of lower extremity strength training on physical recovery in patients underwent total knee replacement

Dublin, Ireland

Purpose: Patients with knee of osteoarthritis (OA) after surgery had experienced physical function decrease and impact their quality of life. However, they always lack a long-term, home-style, and continuous legs exercise training methods, and rare study to explore the effects on physical recovery and quality of life after exercise training. The purpose of this study was to examine the effects of lower extremity muscle strength training on patients" physical recovery and quality of live underwent total knee replacement.

Methods: The quasi-experimental design was conducted, and using a simple randomize sampling (as patients admission priority order) to collect participants" data. Eligible sample recruited from a hospital in Tainan. Inclusion criteria were above 20 old, and will be received total knee replacement (TKR). Outcome measurements included the Knee injury and osteoarthritis outcome score (KOOS, including pain, symptoms, active daily life [ADL], sport & recreation, and quality of life five subscales), disease related variables, and personal demographics. Participants were distributed into with a lower extremity muscle strength training and the training started before surgery (experimental group, n=100) or with usual care (control group, n=100). The lower extremity strength training was conducted by a nurse practitioner. We examined outcome indicators before surgery (T1) and follow up at two weeks (T2), one month (T3), two months (T4), and three months (T5) after TKR.

Results: The KOOS subscales scores showed that all the two groups" patients experienced physical function (ADL and sport & recreation) and quality of life decreased at the two weeks after received TKR, but all the subscales scores gradually increased from one month to third months after TKR (p < .001). The generalized estimating equation (GEE) tests showed that both group and time were significantly different, indicated that both group patients experienced physical function and quality of life improvement, however, the exercise group physical function and quality of life was early recovery and better than no exercise group physical function and quality of life after TKR.

Conclusion: The study confirmed that after lower extremity muscle strength training exercise helps to improve the quality of life and physical function recovery in patients who undergone TKR. This results recommend for the healthcare staff embed this training into pre-surgical nursing care and patients" discharge plan in care of TKR patient as a continuous daily rehabilitation activity at home.