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Research Article

Muscle strength, gait, and balance in 20 patients with hip osteoarthritis followed for 2 years after THA

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Pages 183-188 | Received 07 Oct 2009, Accepted 05 Feb 2009, Published online: 29 Jun 2010
 

Abstract

Background Patients with hip osteoarthritis (OA) have muscular weakness, impaired balance, and limp. Deficits in the different limb muscles and their recovery courses are largely unknown, however. We hypothesized that there is persisting muscular weakness in lower limb muscles and an impaired balance and gait 2 years after THA.

Patients and methods 20 elderly patients with unilateral OA were assessed before, and 6 and 24 months after surgery for maximal voluntary isometric strength of hip and knee muscles and by gait analysis, postural stability, and clinical scores (HHS, SF-36, EuroQoL).

Results Hip muscles showed a remaining 6% weakness compared to the contralateral healthy limb 2 years after THA. Preoperatively and 6 months postoperatively, that deficit was 18% and 12%, respectively. Knee extensors fully recovered a preoperative 27% deficit after 2 years. Gait analysis demonstrated a shorter single stance phase for the OA limb compared to healthy limb preoperatively, that had already recovered at the 6-month follow-up. Balance of two-foot standing showed improvement in both sagittal and lateral sway after operation. All clinical scores improved.

Interpretation Muscle strength data demonstrated a slow but full recovery of muscles acting about the knee, but there was still a deficit in hip muscle strength 2 years after THA. Gait and balance recovered after the operation. To accelerate improvement in muscular strength after THA, postoperative training should probably be more intense and target hip abductors.

Acknowledgments

AR: performed all strength, gait, and postural control measurements; also performed data- and statistical analyses, and prepared the manuscript. HEB: designed the study, assisted with some functional measurements, and prepared the manuscript. ND: assisted in study design and manuscript revision.

This research was supported by grants from the foundations of the Swedish National Board of Health and Welfare.

No competing interests declared.