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Joint Diseases clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT02944448 Completed - Clinical trials for Osteoarthritis, Knee

A Study Evaluating Pain Relief and Safety of Orally Administered CR845 in Patients With Osteoarthritis of Hip or Knee

Start date: September 2016
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The study schedule consists of a Screening Period (up to 14 days), a blinded 4- week Titration-to-Effect Period with weekly visits, a blinded 4-week Maintenance Treatment Period at the optimal dose level determined for each patient, and a 1-week Follow-up Period. Eligible patients will be randomized to receive either CR845 or placebo in a 2:1 ratio. Every patient will be started on a 1-mg dose of CR845 or matching placebo. During the post-randomization Titration-to-Effect period, the dose of study drug may be increased to 2.5 mg or 5 mg in a double-blind fashion. Patients may know their dose is being changed but will not know whether they were randomization to active study drug or placebo. Approximately 330 patients will be enrolled in this study.

NCT ID: NCT02928562 Completed - Knee Osteoarthritis Clinical Trials

The Impaction of Exercise Training on Bone Mineral Density in Patients After Total Knee Arthroplasty

Start date: October 1, 2013
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Rehabilitation after total knee arthroplasty (TKA) should consider control of postoperative pain and swelling, protection of the healing graft, restoration of full range of motion symmetric to the contralateral knee, strengthening of the muscles that stabilize the knee, hip, and trunk, enhancing neuromuscular control, and a gradual progression to functional activities that are required for return to the normal daily life. The effects of concomitant injuries and surgical procedures must also be considered in planning an individualized rehabilitation program. However, it is still unclear regarding the optimal exercise prescription after TKA. In the current study, the investigators plan to develop an exercise protocol and evaluate the result in a multidisciplinary approach, i.e. bone mineral density assessment. The exercise prescription consisted of cyclic exercise, aerobic exercise and resistant training exercise for first, second and third year, respectively. Cyclic exercise is advantaged safety and effectiveness of hydraulic resistance equipment, as well as the exercise can be quantitatively determined. Aerobic exercise is privileged by the cardiopulmonary endurance improvement, along with muscle strengthening in the associated muscle groups. Resistance exercise is specified for the indicated muscle groups, especially knee extensors, flexors, ankle plantar flexor and dorsi flexor in TKA reconstructed patients. The investigators hypothesis that using this cyclic exercise process can improve the body composition, muscle strength, bone mass density, level of oxidative damage indicators, gait performance, quality of life, knee joint range of motion, function of cardiopulmonary and fitness. This project will establish the scientific basis for rehabilitation protocol involving knee surgery.

NCT ID: NCT02910830 Completed - Osteoarthrosis Clinical Trials

Osteoarthritis Relationships and Tobacco " Ancillary Study Khoala "

Start date: September 2014
Phase: N/A
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

The role of tobacco in osteoarthritis remains controversial. The Khoala cohort is the first multicenter French cohort of subjects with knee and / or hip osteoarthritis prevalent . It guarantees its methodology great representativeness and therefore an interesting material for the study of risk factors in the population. In addition, it should have little here Radiographs of hands for all its patients. It therefore has the opportunity to study a possible relationship between tobacco and hip osteoarthritis , knee and hand but also to study the relationship between tobacco and structural evolution of hip osteoarthritis and / or symptomatic knee.

NCT ID: NCT02892994 Completed - Clinical trials for Temporomandibular Joint Dysfunction Syndrome

Immediate Effect of Ultrasound Therapy on Bilateral Masseter Myalgia

Start date: April 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study will compare ultrasound 0.4 W/cm^2 and 100% duty cycle versus no ultrasound (placebo) for bilateral masseter myalgia in up to 38 adult women. The dose will be applied for 5 minutes on each side. Both the dose and the starting side will be randomized. Both the subject and ultrasound operator will be blind to the dose. The outcome measures will be pressure pain threshold on both masseter muscles and both temporalis muscles, self reported pain scale (0, no pain to 10, worst pain ever), thermographic temperature of the muscles, and intraoral temperature. These outcome measures will be taken before and after each dose, so three times per subject.

NCT ID: NCT02865447 Completed - Joint Disease Clinical Trials

Evaluation of Bone Mineral Density Changes After Total Hip Replacement: A Two-Year Clinical and DXA Analysis

Start date: March 9, 2017
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Sponsor is conducting this post-market study to evaluate the clinical outcome and femoral bone mineral density (BMD) changes associated with the PROFEMUR® PRESERVE hip stem when used as indicated for primary total hip arthroplasty in patients with osteoarthritis of the hip joint.

NCT ID: NCT02850055 Completed - Tinnitus Clinical Trials

Effectiveness of Manual Therapy in Patients With Tinnitus and Temporomandibular Joint Disorder.

Start date: January 2017
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Tinnitus is one of the most prevalent symptoms that causes more disability in patients with temporomandibular disorder (TMD). The present study postulates a possible link between temporomandibular joint (TMJ) and inner ear based on their anatomical, biomechanical and physiological relationship, proposing a physiotherapy treatment for the temporomandibular joint to improve tinnitus. The aim of the study is to evaluate the effectiveness of adding specific manual therapy to a multimodal physiotherapy treatment in patients with tinnitus and temporomandibular disorder.

NCT ID: NCT02839967 Completed - Clinical trials for Temporomandibular Disorders

Influence of Intraoral Photobiomodulation in Individuals With Temporomandibular Joint Dysfunction

Start date: September 25, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

According to the International Association for the Study of Pain (IASP), the temporomandibular pain and dysfunction syndrome (TMD) is characterized as a subset of orofacial pain, whose signs and symptoms include pain or discomfort in the temporomandibular joints. Pain is considered one of the most common and limiting clinical manifestations. One of the most used resources to treat muscle pain is the low-level laser therapy (LLLT), However, the mechanisms responsible for the effects observed in clinical trials remain poorly elucidated, as well as therapy with light emitting diode therapy (LEDT) which, has some advantages, among them the larger area radiation point and low cost. However, its effects remain elusive in intraoral application in temporal muscle, lateral and medial pterygoid muscle. Assuming that there is need to investigate therapeutic resources that combine not only different wavelengths as well as different light sources (LED and LLLT), this study aims to evaluate the effect of photobiomodulation with a combination of different light sources on pain, joint mobility, equity and quality of jaw movements after treatment in patients with TMD. It will be made a randomized, placebo-controlled and double-blind clinical trial. Individuals participate with myogenic temporomandibular disorder, being allocated into 2 groups randomly and stratified by the method of sealed envelopes. The results will be evaluated using: RDC/TMD, digital caliper, visual analog scale, and kinematics. The protocols will be used in a 6 sessions and will be evaluated in four different moments. The analyses of the data will be performed by adopting a significance level of 5%.

NCT ID: NCT02825667 Completed - Haemophilia Clinical Trials

Effectiveness of the Myofascial Therapy in the Hemophilic Arthropathy of Ankle

Start date: September 12, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Randomized clinical trial to assess the efficacy of a treatment protocol applied fascial therapy in patients with hemophilic arthropathy ankle, oriented to know and describe the observed differences on the dependent variables: range of motion, pain and physical condition. At the same time, the study will determine whether there are adverse effects or bleeding complications as a result of applied physiotherapy treatment.

NCT ID: NCT02822469 Completed - Clinical trials for Temporomandibular Joint Dysfunction

Thermograph Evaluation of Masticatory and Cervical Muscles After Physiotherapeutic Treatment in Tmd Subjects

TEMCMAPTTS
Start date: July 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Background: Different therapeutic approaches have been proposed for the treatment of TMD. Myofascial and joint techniques, exercises, intraoral devices, thermal, electro and phototherapy applications, are among the most common. The combination of local treatments and adjacent structures such as the cervical region have also been studied in this area. It is believed that the anatomic proximity, neuronal interconnections and convergent afferents from the trigeminal and cervical areas can lead the understanding of the relationship of these structures. In order to assess the effects of these different forms of treatment studies have used different resources such as diagnostic imaging and biological signals, in order to complement the clinical diagnosis. Infrared thermography has been one of the resource assessment in the literature and it is interesting and stands out from other methods because it is functional, non-invasive and inexpensive. Purpose: To evaluate the thermograms concerning the masseter and anterior temporal muscles, severity, pain, range of mandibular motion and neck disability in TMD patients, before and after physical therapy applied to the cervical and thoracic regions. Methods: This is a randomized, placebo-controlled study, designed to evaluate the effects of indirect treatment on the thermography of the masticatory muscles, severity, pain, range of motion and neck disability in individuals with TMD. These will be randomized and allocated into two groups: GA (intervention) and GB (placebo) and assessed as: Diagnostic Criteria for Temporomandibular Research Disorders (RDC/TMD), Fonseca´s Anamnesic Index (FAI), Thermography, EVA, IDD-CF, Pachymetry and Neck Disability Index (NDI). Statistical analysis: The temperature of the orofacial region, acquired through thermography is considered the primary endpoint and as a secondary endpoint will be the evaluation of the severity according to FAI, pain by VAS and IDD-CF, the range of mandibular motion by pachymetry and neck disability by NDI. Statistical analysis: The normality of the data will be verified using the Kolmogorov-Smirnov test, which will be expressed as mean and standard deviation and/or median and interquartile range. Repeated measures analysis of variance of two factors, post hoc Bonferroni will be used for inter and intra-group comparisons. The significance level of p≤0.05 is set.

NCT ID: NCT02794922 Completed - Clinical trials for Temporomandibular Joint Disorder

Effectiveness of Vitamin B in Reducing Temporomandibular Joint Disorder Pain

Start date: September 2015
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to determine effectiveness of vitamin B in reducing temporomandibular joint disorder (TMD) pain. Patients will be randomised to receive the study drug or placebo. The study drug we are using is a combination of vitamin B1(thiamine mononitrate)-242.5mg; vitamin B6(pyridoxineHCl)-250mg, and vitamin B12(cyanocobalamin)-1mg. We will assess patient's pain level, range of jaw movement and record any side effects from using this medication.