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PurposeHip and knee arthroplasty aims to reduce joint pain and increase functional mobility in patients with osteoarthritis; however, the degree to which arthroplasty is associated with higher physical activity is unclear. The current study sought to assess the association of hip and knee arthroplasty with objectively measured physical activity.MethodsThis cross-sectional study analysed wrist-worn accelerometer data collected in 2013-2016 from UK Biobank participants (aged 43-78). Multivariable linear regression was performed to assess step count, cadence, overall acceleration, and activity behaviours between non-arthritic controls, end-stage arthritic, and postoperative cohorts, controlling for demographic and behavioural confounders. From a cohort of 94,707 participants with valid accelerometer wear time and complete self-reported data, electronic health records were used to identify 3,506 participants having undergone primary or revision hip or knee arthroplasty and 68,389 non-arthritic controls.ResultsEnd-stage hip or knee arthritis was associated with taking 1,129 fewer steps/day [95% CI: 811, 1,447] (p < 0.001), and having 5.8 fewer minutes/day [95% CI: 3.0, 8.7] (p < 0.001) of moderate-to-vigorous activity compared to non-arthritic controls. Unilateral primary hip and knee arthroplasty were associated with 877 [95% CI: 284, 1,471] (p = 0.004) and 893 [95% CI: 232, 1,554] (p = 0.008) more steps than end-stage osteoarthritic participants, respectively. Postoperative unilateral hip arthroplasty participants demonstrated levels of moderate-to-vigorous physical activity and daily step count equivalent to non-arthritic controls. No difference in physical activity was observed between any cohorts in terms of overall acceleration, or time spent in daily light activity, sedentary behaviour, or sleep.ConclusionsHip and knee arthroplasty are associated with higher levels of physical activity compared to participants with end-stage arthritis. Unilateral hip arthroplasty patients, in particular, demonstrate equivalence to non-arthritic peers at more than 1 year following surgery.

Original publication

DOI

10.1249/mss.0000000000003365

Type

Journal article

Journal

Medicine and science in sports and exercise

Publication Date

12/2023