Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics
Volume 33, Issue 6 , Pages 438-444, July 2010

Effects of Chiropractic Care on Pain and Function in Patients With Hip Osteoarthritis Waiting for Arthroplasty: A Clinical Pilot Trial

  • Pernilla Thorman, RC

      Affiliations

    • Research Fellow, Research Unit, Scandinavian College of Chiropractic, Solna, Sweden
    • Corresponding Author InformationSubmit requests for reprints to: Pernilla Thorman, RC, Research Unit, Scandinavian College of Chiropractic, Råsundavägen 101, S-169 57 Solna, Sweden
  • ,
  • Alexander Dixner, RC

      Affiliations

    • Research Fellow, Research Unit, Scandinavian College of Chiropractic, Solna, Sweden
  • ,
  • Tobias Sundberg, PT, DO, PhD

      Affiliations

    • Research Fellow, Research Unit, Scandinavian College of Chiropractic, Solna, Sweden
    • Clinical Researcher, Research Unit for Studies of Integrative Health Care, Karolinska Institutet (NVS/OMV), Huddinge, Sweden

Received 21 December 2009; received in revised form 1 June 2010; accepted 8 June 2010.

Abstract 

Objective

The purpose of this study was to explore the short-term effects of chiropractic care on pain and function in patients with hip osteoarthritis.

Methods

A convenience sample of 14 patients waiting to undergo unilateral hip arthroplasty at a large university hospital received either chiropractic care (n = 7) or no additional treatment (n = 7) during a 3-week period. The main outcome was the change in self-rated hip pain on a 100 mm Visual Analogue Scale (VAS, 0-100). Secondary outcomes were the change in the five Hip disability and Osteoarthritis Outcome Subscales (HOOS, 0-100), which include pain, other symptoms, function in daily living, function in sport and recreation and hip related quality of life. Nonparametric statistics were used to explore outcome changes from baseline to follow-up after three weeks within and between the groups.

Results

Patients receiving chiropractic care, on average 4.4 (SD ±1.0) treatments over 3 weeks, showed a clinically and statistically significant improvement in self-rated hip pain, VAS - 26.0 (SD ±28.4), P = .043. The chiropractic patients also had clinically important, but not statistically significant, improvement scores in HOOS function in daily living 18.6 (SD ±18.5), pain 15.4 (SD ±17.2), and hip-related quality of life 12.4 (SD ±19.6). The waiting list controls had no statistically significant improvements in any outcome measured, but a clinically relevant improvement in HOOS Pain 12.2 (SD ±18.2), P = .051 was observed. There were no statistically significant differences between the groups due to the small sample size. Approximately 25 patients per arm would be required to adequately power a full scale randomized controlled trial with VAS for hip pain as the main outcome measure.

Conclusions

Chiropractic care may provide a short-term benefit in decreasing hip pain for patients with hip osteoarthritis waiting for hip arthroplasty. The pilot findings warrant larger scale randomized controlled trials with longer-term follow-ups.

Key Indexing Terms: Chiropractic, Osteoarthritis, Hip, Arthroplasty, Replacement, Pain, Activities of Daily Living

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PII: S0161-4754(10)00153-3

doi:10.1016/j.jmpt.2010.06.006

Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics
Volume 33, Issue 6 , Pages 438-444, July 2010