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Impaired Perception of Body-Weight Distribution Marks Functional Mobility Problems in Patients Undergoing Total Hip Arthroplasty.

Davide De LeoFederico TemporitiCarlotta BleggiMoreno La GuardiaPaola AdamoRoberto Gatti
Published in: Perceptual and motor skills (2024)
Hip osteoarthritis and total hip arthroplasty imply damaged articular and periarticular structures responsible for proprioception, and this damage may impair the accurate perception of body-weight distribution. In this study, we investigated proprioceptive abilities and accuracy perceiving body-weight distribution in patients undergoing total hip arthroplasty, and we assessed the associations between these abilities and body perception accuracy with functional mobility testing in 20 patients scheduled for total hip arthroplasty and 20 age-matched healthy participants. We assessed (a) absolute error in hip joint position sense (AE-JPS), (b) absolute error in body-weight distribution (AE-BWD) during standing and sit-to-stand tasks with open and closed eyes, and (c) functional mobility with the Timed Up and Go Test (TUG). We assessed patients undergoing hip arthroplasty before (T0) and five days after their surgery (T1), while control participants underwent a single evaluation. Relative to controls, participants undergoing surgery showed higher AE-JPS at 15° of hip flexion at T0 ( p = .003) and at T1 ( p = .007), greater AE-BWD during sit-to-stand with open eyes at T1 ( p = .014) and with closed eyes at both T0 ( p = .014) and at T1 ( p < .001), and worse TUG at both T0 ( p = .009) and T1 ( p < .001). AE-BWD during sit-to-stand with closed eyes positively correlated with TUG at T0 ( r = 0.55, p = .011) and at T1 ( r = 0.51, p = .027). These findings suggested that impairments in body-weight distribution perception were evident both before and immediately after total hip arthroplasty, suggesting that these impairments may regularly mark these patients' functional mobility problems.
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