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Three of the five recommendations in the first-ever list developed by the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons for the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation’s "Choosing Wisely" campaign focus primarily on treatments for symptomatic osteoarthritis.
The campaign is meant to educate patients and physicians about unnecessary and potentially harmful testing and treatment.
According to the Choosing Wisely website, the AAOS’s list was formed based on a review of the most recent approved clinical practice guidelines previously developed by AAOS physician volunteer work groups and a selection of a variety of topics frequently used in orthopaedic surgical practice with input from specialty society leaders and the Academy’s presidential leadership and board of directors. The list was created with the intent to "serve as an educational tool based on an assessment of the current scientific and clinical information and accepted approaches to treatment."
However, some specialists find fault with the recommendations. For example, Dr. Roy Altman, a professor of medicine in the division of rheumatology and immunology at the University of California, Los Angeles, said the methodology used to create the guidelines overlooks a number of treatments, including multimodal therapy, and could have the unintended consequence of allowing specialists to deny effective care to patients.
"These guidelines are not consistent with my clinical experience," Dr. Altman said. In particular, he noted that many of his patients react positively to injection treatments for osteoarthritis (OA), which the Choosing Wisely recommendations specifically discourage.
AAOS’s recommendations are as follows:
• Avoid using postoperative ultrasonography screening for deep vein thrombosis on patients receiving hip or knee arthroplasty because it is not effective at diagnosing unsuspected cases.
• Don’t use needle lavage for long-term relief in symptomatic OA treatment, as the procedure "does not lead to measurable improvements in pain, function, 50-foot walking time, stiffness, tenderness, or swelling."
• Do not use glucosamine and chondroitin sulfate to treat patients with symptomatic knee OA.
• Lateral wedge or neutral insoles do not improve pain or functional outcomes in patients; on the contrary, patients with OA of the knee may experience fewer symptoms without insoles.
• Routine postoperative splinting of the wrist after the carpal tunnel release procedure does not improve subjective outcomes, and may lead to detrimental effects, including adhesion formation, stiffness, and prevention of nerve and tendon movement.
Three of the five recommendations in the first-ever list developed by the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons for the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation’s "Choosing Wisely" campaign focus primarily on treatments for symptomatic osteoarthritis.
The campaign is meant to educate patients and physicians about unnecessary and potentially harmful testing and treatment.
According to the Choosing Wisely website, the AAOS’s list was formed based on a review of the most recent approved clinical practice guidelines previously developed by AAOS physician volunteer work groups and a selection of a variety of topics frequently used in orthopaedic surgical practice with input from specialty society leaders and the Academy’s presidential leadership and board of directors. The list was created with the intent to "serve as an educational tool based on an assessment of the current scientific and clinical information and accepted approaches to treatment."
However, some specialists find fault with the recommendations. For example, Dr. Roy Altman, a professor of medicine in the division of rheumatology and immunology at the University of California, Los Angeles, said the methodology used to create the guidelines overlooks a number of treatments, including multimodal therapy, and could have the unintended consequence of allowing specialists to deny effective care to patients.
"These guidelines are not consistent with my clinical experience," Dr. Altman said. In particular, he noted that many of his patients react positively to injection treatments for osteoarthritis (OA), which the Choosing Wisely recommendations specifically discourage.
AAOS’s recommendations are as follows:
• Avoid using postoperative ultrasonography screening for deep vein thrombosis on patients receiving hip or knee arthroplasty because it is not effective at diagnosing unsuspected cases.
• Don’t use needle lavage for long-term relief in symptomatic OA treatment, as the procedure "does not lead to measurable improvements in pain, function, 50-foot walking time, stiffness, tenderness, or swelling."
• Do not use glucosamine and chondroitin sulfate to treat patients with symptomatic knee OA.
• Lateral wedge or neutral insoles do not improve pain or functional outcomes in patients; on the contrary, patients with OA of the knee may experience fewer symptoms without insoles.
• Routine postoperative splinting of the wrist after the carpal tunnel release procedure does not improve subjective outcomes, and may lead to detrimental effects, including adhesion formation, stiffness, and prevention of nerve and tendon movement.
Three of the five recommendations in the first-ever list developed by the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons for the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation’s "Choosing Wisely" campaign focus primarily on treatments for symptomatic osteoarthritis.
The campaign is meant to educate patients and physicians about unnecessary and potentially harmful testing and treatment.
According to the Choosing Wisely website, the AAOS’s list was formed based on a review of the most recent approved clinical practice guidelines previously developed by AAOS physician volunteer work groups and a selection of a variety of topics frequently used in orthopaedic surgical practice with input from specialty society leaders and the Academy’s presidential leadership and board of directors. The list was created with the intent to "serve as an educational tool based on an assessment of the current scientific and clinical information and accepted approaches to treatment."
However, some specialists find fault with the recommendations. For example, Dr. Roy Altman, a professor of medicine in the division of rheumatology and immunology at the University of California, Los Angeles, said the methodology used to create the guidelines overlooks a number of treatments, including multimodal therapy, and could have the unintended consequence of allowing specialists to deny effective care to patients.
"These guidelines are not consistent with my clinical experience," Dr. Altman said. In particular, he noted that many of his patients react positively to injection treatments for osteoarthritis (OA), which the Choosing Wisely recommendations specifically discourage.
AAOS’s recommendations are as follows:
• Avoid using postoperative ultrasonography screening for deep vein thrombosis on patients receiving hip or knee arthroplasty because it is not effective at diagnosing unsuspected cases.
• Don’t use needle lavage for long-term relief in symptomatic OA treatment, as the procedure "does not lead to measurable improvements in pain, function, 50-foot walking time, stiffness, tenderness, or swelling."
• Do not use glucosamine and chondroitin sulfate to treat patients with symptomatic knee OA.
• Lateral wedge or neutral insoles do not improve pain or functional outcomes in patients; on the contrary, patients with OA of the knee may experience fewer symptoms without insoles.
• Routine postoperative splinting of the wrist after the carpal tunnel release procedure does not improve subjective outcomes, and may lead to detrimental effects, including adhesion formation, stiffness, and prevention of nerve and tendon movement.