Effectiveness of Manual
Physical Therapy and Exercise in Osteoarthritis of the
Knee
A Randomized, Controlled
Trial
Gail D. Deyle, MPT; Nancy E.
Henderson, PhD, MPT; Robert L. Matekel, MPT;
Michael G. Ryder, MPT; Matthew B.
Garber, MPT; and Stephen C. Allison, PhD,
MPT, ECS
Annals of Internal
Medicine
Background: Few
investigations include both subjective and
objective measurements of the effectiveness of
treatments for osteoarthritis of the knee.
Beneficial interventions may decrease the
disability associated with osteoarthritis and the need
for more invasive treatments.
Objective: To
evaluate the effectiveness of physical therapy
for osteoarthritis of the knee, applied by
experienced physical therapists with formal
training in manual therapy.
Design: Randomized,
controlled clinical trial.
Setting: Outpatient
physical therapy department of a large
military medical center.
Patients: 83
patients with osteoarthritis of the knee who were
randomly assigned to receive treatment (n = 42;
15 men and 27 women [mean age, 60 ± 11 years])
or placebo (n = 41; 19 men and 22
women [mean age, 62 ± 10 years]).
Intervention: The
treatment group received manual therapy,
applied to the knee as well as to the lumbar spine, hip,
and ankle as required, and performed a
standardized knee exercise program in the
clinic and at home. The placebo group had subtherapeutic
ultrasound to the knee at an intensity of 0.1 W/cm2
with a 10% pulsed mode. Both groups were
treated at the clinic twice weekly for 4
weeks.
Measurements:
Distance walked in 6 minutes and sum of the function,
pain, and stiffness subscores of the Western
Ontario and McMaster Universities
Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC). A tester who was
blinded to group assignment made group comparisons
at the initial visit (before initiation of
treatment), 4 weeks, 8 weeks, and 1 year.
Results: Clinically
and statistically significant improvements in
6-minute walk distance and WOMAC score at 4 weeks and 8
weeks were seen in the treatment group but
not the placebo group. By 8 weeks, average
6-minute walk distances had improved by 13.1%
and WOMAC scores had improved by 55.8% over baseline
values in the treatment group (P < 0.05).
After controlling for potential confounding
variables, the average distance walked in 6
minutes at 8 weeks among patients in the treatment group
was 170 m (95% CI, 71 to 270 m) more than that in
the placebo group and the average WOMAC
scores were 599 mm higher (95% CI, 197 to
1002 mm). At 1 year, patients in the treatment group
had clinically and statistically significant gains
over baseline WOMAC scores and walking
distance; 20% of patients in the placebo
group and 5% of patients in the treatment group had
undergone knee arthroplasty.
Conclusions: A
combination of manual physical therapy and supervised
exercise yields functional benefits for patients
with osteoarthritis of the knee and may delay
or prevent the need for surgical intervention. |