What is the multifactorial efficacy of day-zero ambulation post-total hip replacement surgery: A systematic review
What is the multifactorial efficacy of day-zero ambulation post-total hip replacement surgery: A systematic review
Objective: to examine the multi-factorial efficacy of day-zero ambulation following primary total hip arthroplasty.
Data Sources: MEDLINE, CINAHL, AMED, EMBASE and APA PsychInfo in accordance with PRISMA guidelines.
Review Methods: studies were classified for study design and ranked in a hierarchy of evidence. Studies ranked excellent or good who followed a treatment pathway inclusive of day-zero ambula-tion were appraised using the appropriate content checklist (PRISMA, CONSORT, STROBE), CASP checklist and where possible for risk of bias using the appropriate tool (RoB 2.0, ROBINS-1). Results were produced using a narrative synthesis.
Results: a total of 8 studies met inclusion criteria. Studies reported a consensus of a reduced length of hospital stay in pathways where day-zero ambulation was included, but with varying effect sizes. Findings suggested that day-zero ambulation may speed up return to function following THR. There was not enough evidence to provide synthesised results on financial efficiency, post-operative pain, or safety of day-zero ambulation via post-operative complications.
Conclusions: this systematic review reveals limitations within the literature base on day ze-ro-ambulation. There are problems of concomitant interventions, methodological heterogeneity, and an abundance of research low in the evidence hierarchy. Day zero-ambulation shows promise in reducing length of hospital stay and there is suggestion that it accelerates functional recovery. However, to establish this with rigor, there is further need for high quality, prospective studies such as RCTs to examine the multi-factorial effect of day-zero ambulation, challenge existing theories and contribute to confident synthesised findings more useful to clinical decision makers.
Arthroplasty; Hip Replacement; Efficacy
115-124
Efford, Christopher Matthew
82f1ad3d-d2d4-4ea2-b3c2-3e4383c8299f
Holdsworth, Catherine
3f30216d-40ca-433c-bca8-e8fcf3f73c27
Donovan-Hall, Maggie
5f138055-2162-4982-846c-5c92411055e0
Samuel, Dinesh
03b00738-9b9c-4c0a-a85a-cf43fc0932fc
Efford, Christopher Matthew
82f1ad3d-d2d4-4ea2-b3c2-3e4383c8299f
Holdsworth, Catherine
3f30216d-40ca-433c-bca8-e8fcf3f73c27
Donovan-Hall, Maggie
5f138055-2162-4982-846c-5c92411055e0
Samuel, Dinesh
03b00738-9b9c-4c0a-a85a-cf43fc0932fc
Efford, Christopher Matthew, Holdsworth, Catherine, Donovan-Hall, Maggie and Samuel, Dinesh
(2024)
What is the multifactorial efficacy of day-zero ambulation post-total hip replacement surgery: A systematic review.
Journal of Orthopaedics, 60, .
(doi:10.1016/j.jor.2024.08.003).
Abstract
Objective: to examine the multi-factorial efficacy of day-zero ambulation following primary total hip arthroplasty.
Data Sources: MEDLINE, CINAHL, AMED, EMBASE and APA PsychInfo in accordance with PRISMA guidelines.
Review Methods: studies were classified for study design and ranked in a hierarchy of evidence. Studies ranked excellent or good who followed a treatment pathway inclusive of day-zero ambula-tion were appraised using the appropriate content checklist (PRISMA, CONSORT, STROBE), CASP checklist and where possible for risk of bias using the appropriate tool (RoB 2.0, ROBINS-1). Results were produced using a narrative synthesis.
Results: a total of 8 studies met inclusion criteria. Studies reported a consensus of a reduced length of hospital stay in pathways where day-zero ambulation was included, but with varying effect sizes. Findings suggested that day-zero ambulation may speed up return to function following THR. There was not enough evidence to provide synthesised results on financial efficiency, post-operative pain, or safety of day-zero ambulation via post-operative complications.
Conclusions: this systematic review reveals limitations within the literature base on day ze-ro-ambulation. There are problems of concomitant interventions, methodological heterogeneity, and an abundance of research low in the evidence hierarchy. Day zero-ambulation shows promise in reducing length of hospital stay and there is suggestion that it accelerates functional recovery. However, to establish this with rigor, there is further need for high quality, prospective studies such as RCTs to examine the multi-factorial effect of day-zero ambulation, challenge existing theories and contribute to confident synthesised findings more useful to clinical decision makers.
Text
C.Efford Systematic Review Day Zero Mobilisation
- Accepted Manuscript
Restricted to Repository staff only until 13 August 2025.
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Accepted/In Press date: 6 August 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 13 August 2024
Keywords:
Arthroplasty; Hip Replacement; Efficacy
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 494112
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/494112
ISSN: 2589-9082
PURE UUID: 8c9c9b7d-26dd-4a59-a39b-1e58806665b4
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Date deposited: 24 Sep 2024 16:38
Last modified: 02 Oct 2024 01:40
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Author:
Christopher Matthew Efford
Author:
Catherine Holdsworth
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