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Mobilization and rehabilitation are essential components of a successful functional recovery following total hip and knee arthroplasties. Currently, we have no good measure of how mobile patients are after their surgery. Recent technological advances in personal activity monitors, such as the Fitbit, might provide medical providers and patients the opportunity to more objectively monitor their postoperative mobility and recovery course. However, these consumer activity monitors have yet to be validated in terms of their accuracy and utility for monitoring mobility in the immediate postoperative setting in arthroplasty patients. Our goal is to validate one of the most popular consumer activity monitors, the Fitbit Zip, in the postoperative total joint arthroplasty patient population.
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Early mobilization following total hip and knee arthroplasty surgeries is important in decreasing the risk of complications such as deep venous thrombosis, pulmonary embolus, pneumonia, and urinary retention. It is also generally accepted that early mobilization may help prevent late complications such as joint stiffness or arthrofibrosis. Aside from these complications, patient satisfaction and length of hospital stay both seem to be correlated with early mobilization with poor mobility negatively impacting both outcomes. Therefore, it is important for clinicians to ensure that patients are adequately mobilizing in the immediate postoperative period to promote a successful recovery after total hip or knee arthroplasty.
Consumer activity monitors are generally manufactured to be used in a relatively healthy, ambulatory population. Their accuracy has been validated in multiple studies in healthy subjects in a variety controlled settings. Based on these validity studies, it is clear that some of these consumer activity monitors have worse accuracy in certain situations, such as slower-paced walking or in people using assistive devices for ambulation, such as canes. The limitations of these devices in these settings could be problematic for monitoring post-arthroplasty patients since all these patients ambulate slowly, with an altered gait, and with a walker. No studies to date have looked at the accuracy of consumer activity monitors in the immediate postoperative arthroplasty population.
The consumer activity monitor market is rapidly evolving and changing, so much so that monitors used just last year might be obsolete this year. Therefore, rather than examining the accuracy of one device versus another, it is more applicable to determine what location is most accurate for placement of these monitors to help providers counsel patients on proper use postoperatively.
Our goal for this study is to validate and to determine the best location for placement of the Fitbit Zip in the postoperative total joint arthroplasty patient population.
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70 participants in 1 patient group
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David B Auyong, MD
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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