Open Access
LONG TERM QUALITY OF LIFE HEALTH OUTCOMES IN PATIENTS RECEIVING ULTRASOUND GUIDED INJECTIONS: PRELIMINARY ANALYSIS
Author(s) -
Andrea Stracciolini,
Greggory Kobelski,
Maxwell McKee-Proctor,
YiMeng Yen,
Pierre A. d’Hemecourt,
Dai Sugimoto
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
orthopaedic journal of sports medicine
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.329
H-Index - 35
ISSN - 2325-9671
DOI - 10.1177/2325967120s00273
Subject(s) - medicine , quality of life (healthcare) , repeated measures design , physical therapy , post hoc analysis , bonferroni correction , analysis of variance , osteoarthritis , prospective cohort study , surgery , alternative medicine , statistics , nursing , mathematics , pathology
BACKGROUND: Hip pain is a common complaint in athletes of all ages. Hip pathology includes both intra- and peri-articular pain generators. Ultrasound (US) evaluation and guided injections are used in the clinical setting for diagnostic and therapeutic purposes. However, evidence regarding the impact of US-guided injections on quality of life (QoL) health outcomes in patients with hip pain and injury is understudied.PURPOSE: To examine the long-term efficacy of US-guided injections on QoL outcomes in patients presenting to a tertiary level academic hip preservation program.METHODS: Prospective longitudinal study design was used to evaluate 12-55 years old patients with hip pain/pathology. Patients completed a Hip Disability and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (HOOS) questionnaire at the initial evaluation, 1.5-months, 4.5-months, and 12-months. Main outcome measures included change in QoL HOOS scores. Repeated measures analysis of variance (ANOVA) was performed to compare patients who received US-guided injections and patients who did not receive US-guided injections over time. Bonferroni pairwise comparison was performed as a post-hoc analysis.RESULTS: A total of 175 patients were included with a mean age of 24.1±9.8 years. There were 104 patients who received US-guided injections while 71 patients did not have US-guided injections. An interaction between US-guided injections over 12-months on QoL scores was identified. QoL increase over time was 6.5 points in patients without US-guided injection compared to 10.0 points in patients who had an US-guided injection ( P=0.040, Figure 1). Main effect of US-guided injections on QoL was not detected ( P=0.276). However, main effect of time on QoL was found ( P=0.003). Bonferroni post-hoc analysis indicated differences between initial evaluation and 1.5 months ( P=0.004, Figure 2), and initial evaluation and 12-months ( P=0.002, Figure 3).CONCLUSION: US-guided injections appeared to improve quality of life outcomes over the 12-month study period. US-guided injections may serve to help patients with hip pain presenting to clinic over time and promote and support non-surgical treatment regimes.[Figure: see text][Figure: see text][Figure: see text]