Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) places a large burden on the Canadian Health care system with over 700 million dollars spent on this procedure annually. Exercise has been shown to be effective in improving pain, physical function, mobility and quality of life post-operatively. There is very limited research on adherence to rehabilitation and exercise after TKA. The aim of this thesis was to increase understanding of exercise adherence in this population.
The first manuscript in this thesis was a scoping review that evaluated exercise adherence and the quality of reporting of exercise interventions within post-operative TKA rehabilitation trials. A systematic search of scientific databases was conducted for randomized controlled trials (RCT) with an exercise intervention for post-operative TKA. In total, 112 articles were included in this review. This study found that the vast majority of articles (85%) were of poor quality having either high/unclear risk of bias. The majority of RCTs (63%, N=71) on post-operative TKA rehabilitation did not adequately report exercise adherence (e.g., definition, outcome measure used and results), while only 23% (N=15) provided a definition of adherence in the context of their study. Overall reporting of the exercise intervention was poor, with 15 items (of 19) of the Consensus on Exercise Reporting Template (CERT) reported less than 60% of the time. Inadequate reporting of exercise interventions and adherence to exercises leads to decreased reproducibility and translation into clinical practice. Proper reporting of rehabilitation exercises after TKA will ensure standardization for future studies and clinical replication.
The second manuscript in this thesis was a qualitative study that aimed to understand the patient- related barriers and facilitators to exercise adherence in patients immediately after undergoing TKA. Using an interpretive description approach, semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted. Seven participants were interviewed at 8-weeks post-operatively in order to better capture physical, psychological, social and contextual factors linked to exercise adherence. Interview questions explored participants’ experience with physical activity and exercise, motivation to perform physical activity, beliefs that exercise will reduce pain, the factors that limit their ability to engage in exercise, and the importance of using self-regulation to improve exercise adherence. Emergent themes were mapped onto the domains of the WHO adherence framework. This study identified 4 themes that fit within the WHO adherence framework: patient-related factors, condition-related factors, health care system, and social support. In particular, self-regulation, previous knowledge of exercise, post-operative complications, comorbidities, social support, and lack of guidance from health care providers were identified as personal and environmental characteristics that affect exercise adherence. The overall findings of this study suggest exercise adherence is a multifaceted construct with interconnected concepts. / Thesis / Master of Health Sciences (MSc) / Total knee replacement (TKR) surgery costs the Canadian Health care system millions of dollars per year. Exercise is an effective method for improving function and decreasing pain after surgery. However, it is unclear how much patients perform exercise as recommended by health care providers. The purpose of this study was to understand exercise behaviour after knee surgery.
The first study was a scoping review that looked at exercise adherence and the characteristics of exercise treatments delivered after knee surgery in previously published clinical trials. The study found that most studies did not report enough information for replication of exercise treatment protocols (e.g. description of provided exercises/progression, who implemented the intervention, etc.). Similarly, exercise adherence was also poorly reported (e.g., definition, how adherence was measured). Poor reporting of exercise treatment methods, and how well participants complete exercises decreases the ability of researchers and therapists to apply the results of these trials.
In the second study, patients were interviewed after knee surgery to understand why patients do or do not exercise after surgery. There were several factors, both positive and negative, that patients identified that affected their ability to exercise (e.g. self-regulation (referring to the ability to control thoughts, emotions and behaviour to pursue long-term goals), prior knowledge of exercise, having social support from family and friends, as well as lack of support from health care providers). The overall findings suggest that how well participants exercise after surgery is a complex issue. In order to improve exercise adherence, we need to have a better understanding of the individual factors that may influence adherence.
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:mcmaster.ca/oai:macsphere.mcmaster.ca:11375/25772 |
Date | 11 1900 |
Creators | Bakaa, Nooralhuda |
Contributors | Macedo, Luciana, Rehabilitation Science |
Source Sets | McMaster University |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
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