Supervised telerehabilitation noninferior to home-visit rehabilitation after TKA .
This report has been verified
by one or more authors of the
original publication.
This study has been identified as potentially high impact.
OE's AI-driven High Impact metric estimates the influence a paper is likely to have by integrating signals from both the journal in which it is published and the scientific content of the article itself.
Developed using state-of-the-art natural language processing, the OE High Impact model more accurately predicts a study's future citation performance than journal impact factor alone.
This enables earlier recognition of clinically meaningful research and helps readers focus on articles most likely to shape future practice.
In-Home Telerehabilitation Compared with Face-to-Face Rehabilitation After Total Knee Arthroplasty: A Noninferiority Randomized Controlled Trial
J Bone Joint Surg Am. 2015 Jul 15;97(14):1129-41206 patients scheduled for total knee arthroplasty were randomized to postoperative supervised telerehabilitation or standard, home-visit rehabilitation. The purpose of this study was to determine if telerehabilitation was noninferior to standard in-home, face-to-face rehabilitation. Participants were assessed through clinical outcome scores and functional measures preoperatively, at discharge, and a 2 and 4 months after discharge. Results demonstrated no significant differences between groups for any of the studied outcome measures, indicating the noninferiority of telerehabilitation.
Unlock the Full ACE Report
You have access to 4 more FREE articles this month.
Click below to unlock and view this ACE Reports
Unlock Now
Critical appraisals of the latest, high-impact randomized controlled trials and systematic reviews in orthopaedics
Access to OrthoEvidence podcast content, including collaborations with the Journal of Bone and Joint Surgery, interviews with internationally recognized surgeons, and roundtable discussions on orthopaedic news and topics
Subscription to The Pulse, a twice-weekly evidence-based newsletter designed to help you make better clinical decisions
Exclusive access to original content articles, including in-house systematic reviews, and articles on health research methods and hot orthopaedic topics
