Publication date: June 2019
Source: Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation, Volume 100, Issue 6
Author(s): Robbert M. Wouters, Jonathan Tsehaie, Harm P. Slijper, Steven E.R. Hovius, Reinier Feitz, Arjen Blomme, Berbel Sluijter, Corinne Schouten, Dirk-Jan van der Avoort, Erik Walbeehm, Gijs van Couwelaar, Guus Vermeulen, Hans Schipper, Hans Temming, Jeroen van Uchelen, Luitzen de Boer, Nicoline de Haas, Oliver Zöphel, Reinier Feitz, Sebastiaan Souer
Abstract
Objective
To compare the effect of exercises and orthotics with orthotics alone on pain and hand function in patients with first carpometacarpal joint (CMC-1) osteoarthritis (OA) and to predict outcomes on pain and hand function of exercises and orthotics.
Design
Prospective cohort study with propensity score matching.
Setting
Data collection took place in 13 outpatient clinics for hand surgery and hand therapy in The Netherlands.
Participants
A consecutive, population-based sample of patients with CMC-1 OA (N=173) was included in this study, of which 84 were matched on baseline demographics and baseline primary outcomes.
Interventions
Exercises and orthotics versus orthotics alone.
Main Outcome Measures
Primary outcomes included pain and hand function at 3 months, measured using visual analog scale (VAS, 0-100) and the Michigan Hand Outcomes Questionnaire (MHQ, 0-100).
Results
A larger decrease in VAS pain at rest (11.1 points difference; 95% confidence interval, 1.9-20.3; P=.002) and during physical load (22.7 points difference; 95% confidence interval, 13.6-31.0; P<.001) was found in the exercise + orthotic group compared to the orthotic group. In addition, larger improvement was found for the MHQ subscales pain, work performance, aesthetics, and satisfaction in the exercise + orthotic group. No differences were found on other outcomes. Baseline scores of metacarpophalangeal flexion, presence of scaphotrapeziotrapezoid OA, VAS pain at rest, heavy physical labor, and MHQ total predicted primary outcomes for the total exercise + orthotic group (N=131).
Conclusions
Non-surgical treatment of patients with CMC-1 OA should include exercises, since there is a relatively large treatment effect compared to using an orthosis alone. Future research should study exercises and predictors in a more standardized setting to confirm this finding.
from ScienceDirect Publication: Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation http://bit.ly/2Wvsasd
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