Walk Right for Arthritis
Reported December 10, 2009
CHICAGO, Ill. (Ivanhoe Newswire) — Osteoarthritis affects 27-million Americans. It costs the U.S. economy nearly 128-billion dollars every year in medical care, lost wages and productivity. Right now, the only real cure is a joint replacement. Doctors are trying to change that by making a change in the way patients walk. One woman is feeling the difference in every step.
It was looking like that might be Dana Glock’s only option after suffering for years from osteoarthritis. Injections, anti-inflammatory drugs, creams and knee braces all failed. She joined a study not for a new drug or surgery, but to heal her osteoarthritis by changing the way she walks.
“We’re really hoping to make subtle changes in alignment of the lower limb, Laura Thorp, Ph.D., of Rush University Medical Center, told Ivanhoe.
It starts with a set of exercises that focus on the hip muscles. 15 minutes a day over four weeks slowly changed the way Glock distributes weight when she walks. The exercises help straighten her hips. The idea is to relieve the load on the knees.
“By retraining muscles through these exercises, it’s sort of an unconscious retraining of gait, Thorp explained.
Doctor Thorp measures Glock ‘s progress in a motion lab.
In a study, patients saw the load on their knees decrease by 10-percent after one month. This used to be one of Glock ‘s biggest fears.
“Now, when I’m walking, it’s totally different, Glock said.
It is a new stride and new confidence, no surgery needed.
Doctor Thorp says the routine isn’t a replacement for surgery, but she hopes it can be an intervention that can delay the need for an operation. Once her study is complete, she hopes to publish exercise guidelines for those on the road to joint replacements.
For More Information, Contact:
Laura E. Thorp, M.P.T., Ph.D.
Rush University Medical Center
Chicago, IL
[email protected]