Introduction
Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) is a definitive therapy for progressively debilitating end-stage knee osteoarthritis [
1]. As a golden standard, TKA is credible; however, the dissatisfaction ratio of patients has hit approximately twenty percent [
2,
3].
The dissatisfaction derives from a variety of reasons, among which, the functional improvement and pain alleviation usually are the key factors [
3,
4]. Some studies showed that TKA resulted in a higher knee awareness even 12 months after surgery [
5], and the knee function of most patients never restored to the level of age-matched healthy population [
6]. Moreover, severe pain after TKA caused a delayed postoperative recovery [
7]. The traditional rehabilitation seems to provide limited efficacy for functional recovery. Castrodod et al. verified that high intensity and high velocity exercise were beneficial [
8]. On one hand, post-TKA rehabilitation was encouraged to begin sooner rather than later [
9], but on the other hand, early high intensity training would induce intense pain and consequent kinesiophobia [
10]. It is critical to find a method which can both increase the training intensity early after surgery and improve the knee joint function without causing side effects. Motor imagery (MI) may have the potential to meet the requirements.
It was first reported as early as the 1940s that mental practice could improve the basketball performance and had the same effect as actual physical practice [
11]. MI is a specific mental practice modality which refers to the mind rehearsal of a motor activity without body movements. It began to combine with rehabilitation at the beginning of the twentieth century and has been comprehensively studied so far. MI was widely used in neurological rehabilitation initially. Studies verified that MI was better in improving upper limb function and walking abilities among stroke patients [
12,
13]. It was later found able to work equally well in musculoskeletal disorders rehabilitation. A systematic review showed that MI could provide a superior pain relief and greater range of motion among chronic musculoskeletal pain disorders [
14]. MI also could ameliorate the knee flexion range and Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC) performance in patients with knee osteoarthritis [
15]. Besides the above preoperative effects, MI also performed well in postoperative recovery. Combining MI with action observation could reduce postoperative pain [
16] and significantly improved the motor performance after hip replacement surgery [
17]. Although MI needs no body movements, the cortical-spinal excitability and spinal transmission efficiency, which were specific to the imagined movement, increased during MI compared with during rest [
18,
19]. Therefore, the motor improvement might be due to more efficient motor unit activated by MI [
20]. We postulate that MI is beneficial to the corresponding motor function without causing extra pain even during the early postoperative stage.
Recently, the applications of MI in TKA have been investigated through measuring range of motion (ROM), muscle strength, pain relief, and physical activities. Nevertheless, there were some inconsistencies among these research findings. The aim of this study was to clarify the role of MI in improving functional performance among TKA patients. We hypothesized a great improvement of strength enhancement, pain reduction and physical activities.
Methods
Search strategy
The Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses (PRISMA) statement was used for this systematic review and Meta-analysis [
21]. The detailed PRISMA checklist was shown in Additional file
1. All co-authors agreed on the research protocol for this review before the systematic literature search was carried out by two independent authors (Xue Wang and Wenjiao Wang).
We conducted a systematic search of Medline (Ovid), Embase and Cochrane Controlled Register of Trials (CENTRAL), to identify relevant studies published in English from inception to October 1st, 2021. MeSH terms or keywords, such as “arthroplasty”, “imagination”, “TKA”, and “knee prosthesis”, were used to find relevant studies. We modified the search terms to optimize the search in each database. The reference lists of relevant included studies, reviews and meta‐analyses were screened to identify relevant studies that might have been missed from the database search. We also contacted researchers when additional information was required.
Selection criteria
Studies that met all the following three inclusion criteria were included in the analysis: (1) All participants were aged between 45 and 85 years old. They were diagnosed as osteoarthritis and underwent a TKA surgery. (2) The experimental group was MI, and the control group was blank or a corresponding placebo treatment; physical therapy was routinely used in both groups. (3) The outcome measures included ROM, strength intensity, Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) and physical function.
Studies were excluded if the participants with a body mass index (BMI) greater than 40 kg/m2; or the therapy was implemented during surgery.
Reviews, systematic reviews, meta-analyses, conference proceedings, clinical registration trials, abstracts and repetitive literatures were also excluded.
Risk of bias assessment
The risk of bias was assessed by two authors (Ran Li and Jubao Du) with the method recommended by the Cochrane collaboration [
22]. It contains seven items: selection bias (random sequence generation), selection bias (allocation concealment), performance bias (blinding of participants and personnel), detection bias (blinding of outcome assessment), attrition bias (incomplete outcome data), reporting bias (selective reporting), other bias (anything else). For each item, the authors judgement would be low, unclear or high risk of bias.
Two authors (Ran Li and Jubao Du) did the selection and data collection from the included studies independently. Article information included author name, publication year and country. Participant demographic information included sample size and average years. The intervention details included type of intervention, imagine content, imagine dosage, physical therapy dosage, control content (blank or placebo treatment as a comparison), control dosage, and experimental period. The outcome data included ROM evaluated by goniometer or electric goniometer, strength evaluated by dynamometer, pain evaluated by VAS, physical function evaluated by the Time Up and Go Test (TUG)/Oxford Knee Score (OKS)/WOMAC, pre-test and post-test timing for outcome measures, and results.
Statistical analysis
Meta-analysis was conducted only when the outcomes (strength, VAS, TUG and OKS) were judged by at least two studies; otherwise, systematic review was conducted (ROM and WOMAC). All the outcomes were continuous variables. When the outcome such as OKS was measured with the same scale across all the studies, mean differences (MD) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) were calculated. Standard mean differences (SMD) with 95% CI were calculated when the outcomes such as strength intensity, VAS and TUG were measured by different scales or methods. For the SMD effect size, 0–0.2 was interpreted as meaningless, 0.2–0.5 as a small significance, 0.5–0.8 as a medium significance, and more than 0.8 as a large significance. We presented the results with forest plots. The meta-analysis was synthesized and analyzed using STATA 15.0 statistical software.
Heterogeneity among studies was assessed with I
2 test. Statistical significance was considered when
P < 0.05. I
2 > 75% implied a considerable heterogeneity [
22]. If I
2 > 75%, data were pooled by the random-effects model. If I
2 ≤ 75%, data were pooled by the fixed-effects model. We did not conduct the funnel plot and Egger test due to the limited number of included studies (< 10). Evidence credibility evaluation was discussed.
Discussion
The main findings of this study were that MI in the intervention group was effective in strength enhancement, pain reduction and TUG decrease among the TKA patients. There was a slight OKS improvement in the intervention group with MI but no statistical significance. Because of the inconsistent outcome measures of ROM and the limited study number of WOMAC, we could not give quantitative results definitively. Our analysis suggested that MI may have great potential for improving the prognosis of TKA.
In our study, knee strength was significantly enhanced in the intervention group with MI compared with the control group. Previous systematic review and meta-analysis showed that MI group had advantages on maximal voluntary strength in healthy adult populations compared with the control group without any exercise [
29]. An umbrella and mapping review with meta-meta-analysis tried to investigate the effect of MI and action observation on functional improvement with more studies, which was obviously advantageous for the improvement of arm function and arm performance in stroke patients. However, there was limited evidence about strength gains among musculoskeletal disorders [
16]. To date, only one study supported the positive effect of MI after anterior cruciate ligament reconstruction [
30]. In our study, we found that four out of six included studies supported the positive effect of MI, which has not been confirmed previously. We acquired a positive result probably because of different participants included. The result supported the clinical application of MI in TKA patients.
Our study concluded that MI took specific effect on pain relief, which was consistent with most of previous reviews. The efficacy of MI was evident for patients with acute pain after surgery [
31]. Similarly, it was reported that MI and action observation could relieve pain after a knee or hip surgery [
16]. However, a study supported the benefit of MI in chronic rather than acute musculoskeletal pain. It analyzed that acute pain originated from peripheral tissues, while chronic pain originated from central sensitization [
14]. Given that the central sensitization is a process which develops from acute to chronic phase, MI still has a role in the acute musculoskeletal pain. Apart from MI, some randomized controlled trial (RCT) also studied other similar techniques. For example, enhanced reality could generate dose dependent synergistic analgesia among patients who underwent TKA. Two-week therapy was effective until 33 days after the therapy, while one-week therapy could last about twelve days only [
32]. Furthermore, guided imagery that was applied 2 weeks before and 3 weeks after surgery could relieve pain in TKA patients [
33]. All the above studies verified the importance of movement representation techniques. Movement representation techniques might be a potential analgesic technique in the rehabilitation after TKA. Just because of the small number of studies, it was impossible to give a definitive meta-analysis statement presently [
34]. Therefore, future more studies of MI on improving pain after TKA should be necessary.
There are many indicators for TKA function assessment, including TUG, gait speed, 10-m walk test, OKS and WOMAC. Our summary result showed an improvement of TUG in MI-treated TKA patients, which was consistent with previous studies. Mental simulation practice, mainly the MI and action observation, was verified to have a positive effect on TUG and gait speed for lower limb arthroplasty patients [
35]. It was worth noting that the use of MI could also improve TUG and gait speed for older adults when compared with the controls [
36]. Based on the above two articles, MI should be useful for TKA patients. Due to few related articles, the clinical significance of OKS and WOMAC change needs to be confirmed by more studies. Only a similar study supported action observation in improving WOMAC in patients with knee and hip arthroplasty [
37]. It gave us a hint that researchers might prefer objective TUG and gait speed to subjective OKS and WOMAC. Anyway, MI played a positive role in the functional improvement of TKA patients according to current data.
There was little research about ROM till we finished the searching. A meta-analysis pointed out that MI with standard rehabilitation could bring a progress in ROM among chronic musculoskeletal pain rather than acute musculoskeletal pain. Further analysis found that kinesiophobia and edema might be the influence factors in acute phase which could not be regulated by MI [
14]. No more articles were found except the above article [
16]. Although the progress in ROM might be hindered by kinesiophobia, preoperative joint stiffness, or postoperative edema, our result would provide moderate evidence supporting MI in improving ROM among TKA patients. This was consistent with articles using other movement representation techniques. Two studies observed greater ROM in the action observation group for TKA patients in acute phase [
37]. Another meta-analysis showed a moderate positive effect on the knee extension and flexion of the affected leg for patients with TKA or total hip arthroplasty [
35]. A RCT study even found that the improvement of ROM could successfully maintain 33 days after the enhanced reality therapy for TKA patients in acute phase [
32]. In conclusion, there are some positive results nowadays. More studies are needed to come to a more convincing conclusion about the role of MI in improving ROM in the future.
In brief, two main factors cause the dissatisfaction after TKA: the poor postoperative pain relief and the non-ideal functional recovery. In order to improve postoperative recovery, increasing training intensity has become the common rehabilitation means, which leads to excessive pain in turn. According to our results, MI can perfectly solve the contradiction between increasing exercise intensity and excessive pain. MI can be regarded as a new way to improve the prognosis of TKA.
Some limitations must be mentioned. First, there were limited available articles about MI implementation among the TKA patients. More large-scale, prospective researches are needed in the future. Second, because of the limited available studies, in the inclusion criteria, there were no specific requirements about the operation method. If more studies could be obtained, subgroup analysis such as revision surgery and TKA after unicompartmental knee arthroplasty must be considered. Third, only articles in English were included. Some relevant studies may be missed.
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