A new study has found that patients who underwent hip replacement surgery have showen little improvement in their physical activity levels like walking, cycling or climbing stairs.
Hip replacement surgery is a procedure in which a doctor surgically removes a painful hip joint with arthritis and replaces it with an artificial joint often made from metal and plastic components.
The findings states that the most common reason for a hip replacement is to reduce pain on movement due to osteoarthritis (93 per cent).
The amount of physical activity like walking longer distances or walking more quickly post-surgery would increase was thus expected.
However, lead researcher Tom Withers from the University of East Anglia (UEA) in Britain said, "the study found that there was no clear evidence of a change in physical activity following surgery".
"The lack of significant difference in physical activity after patients undergo such a common procedure suggests there is a need for further research, including further investigation into how other personal characteristics or pre-existing conditions might also influence the results," added Toby Smith, Lecturer at UEA.
In the study, the team of researchers looked at data from about 1,030 patients who had received hip replacements.
The benefits of regular physical activity following a hip replacement are well known, so this research is important for healthcare professionals because it suggests that patients need to be encouraged to be more physically active, the researchers said.
"Healthcare professionals and researchers need to better understand this lack of change and how patient's perceptions of physical activity might be modified to increase their engagement in physical activity post-operatively," Smith noted.
The study was published in the journal Clinical Rehabilitation.
(Witrh IANS inputs)
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