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The Effects of Bariatric Surgery Weight Loss on Knee Pain in Patients with Osteoarthritis of the Knee
Author(s) -
Christopher J Edwards,
Ann M. Rogers,
Scott Lynch,
Tamara Pylawka,
Matthew Silvis,
Ver M. Chinchilli,
Timothy J. Mosher,
Kevin P. Black
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
arthritis
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2090-1984
pISSN - 2090-1992
DOI - 10.1155/2012/504189
Subject(s) - medicine , osteoarthritis , womac , weight loss , overweight , knee pain , obesity , surgery , arthritis , population , knee surgery , physical therapy , alternative medicine , environmental health , pathology
Studies have shown that osteoarthritis (OA) is highly associated with obesity, and individuals clinically defined as obese (BMI > 30.0 kg/m 2 ) are four times more likely to have knee OA over the general population. The purpose of this research was to examine if isolated weight loss improved knee symptoms in patients with osteoarthritis. Adult patients ( n = 24; age 18–70; BMI > 35 kg/m 2 ) with clinical and radiographic evidence of knee OA participated in a one-year trial in which WOMAC and KOOS surveys were administered at a presurgery baseline and six and twelve months postsurgery. Statistical analysis was performed using Student's t and Wilcoxon Signed Rank tests. Weight loss six and twelve months following bariatric surgery was statistically significant ( P < 0.05) compared to presurgery measurements. All variables from both KOOS and WOMAC assessments were significantly improved ( P < 0.05) when compared to baseline. Isolated weight loss occurring via bariatric surgery resulted in statistically significant improvement in patient's knee arthritis symptoms at both six and twelve months. Further research will need to be done to determine if symptom relief continues over time, and if the benefits are also applicable to individuals with symptomatic knee arthritis that are overweight but not obese.

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