AbstractsMedical & Health Science

Hip muscle strength in patients with osteoarthritis of the hip: aspects of the reproducibility of measurement, training and its relevance to self-reported physical function

by Benjamin Steinhilber




Institution: Technische Universität Chemnitz
Department: Human- und Sozialwissenschaften
Degree: PhD
Year: 2012
Record ID: 1107131
Full text PDF: http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:ch1-qucosa-98427


Abstract

Background Osteoarthritis (OA) of the hip is a common disease among elderly adults and its prevalence increases with age. Hip OA is presumed to be a group of diseases resulting in the same pathological pathway, but its etiology is not completely understood. The major symptoms are joint pain, joint stiffness, impaired range of motion, and muscle weakness resulting in increased levels of physical disability (PD) and reduced quality of life. Besides the impairments of the individual subject a heavy economic burden goes along with the disease and is expected to increase due to aging societies in western countries throughout the upcoming years. Exercise therapy (ET), including elements to strengthen the hip muscles, is a common treatment in hip OA and considered to reduce pain and PD. Currently, there is only silver-level scientific evidence regarding the effectiveness of ET in hip OA due to a limited number of high quality studies. Furthermore, the optimal content and dosage, as well as the mode of delivery of ET need to be evaluated. This doctoral thesis deals with three specific aspects of hip muscle strength (HMS) in patients with hip OA: the precision of measuring HMS, training HMS, and the relevance of HMS to physical disability (PD). Three studies and one study protocol provide the scientific program of this thesis, referring to these aspects of HMS. Methods The first study (S1) investigated the reproducibility of isokinetic and isometric HMS measures in patients with hip OA. 16 subjects with unilateral or bilateral hip OA and 13 healthy subjects were tested twice, 7 days apart. A subpopulation of 11 hip OA patients was tested a third time to evaluate familiarization to these measurements. The standard error of measurement (SEM) served as the reproducibility outcome parameter. The second study (S2) investigated the feasibility of strengthening exercises and their effect on HMS in hip patients. 36 participants from an institutional training group for hip patients were allocated randomly to an intervention or control group. While the intervention group completed an eight-week progressive home-based strengthening exercise program (PHSEP) in addition to the weekly institutional supervised group-based exercise therapy (ISET), the control group continued weekly ISET, only. Exercise logs were used to monitor adherence, pain, and the applied exercise intensity of the PHSEP. Before and after the intervention period, HMS was determined using isokinetic concentric and isometric HMS measurements. Additionally, health-related quality of life was assessed by the SF36 questionnaire. These two studies served as a basis for developing strength-specific aspects of a study design for a randomized controlled trial (RCT), which was in progress at the writing of this thesis. This RCT addresses the above-mentioned lack of scientific evidence about the effectiveness of ET in hip OA. A study protocol (P1) describes this RCT, which evaluates the effectiveness of ET on pain and PD in patients with hip OA. 217 patients with hip OA were…