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Osteoarthritis, Knee clinical trials

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NCT ID: NCT04314661 Recruiting - Clinical trials for Osteoarthritis, Knee

Mesenchymal Stem Cell Therapy (MSCs) and Conditioned Medium Therapy for Osteoartrithis

OA
Start date: August 3, 2020
Phase: Phase 1/Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This study aims to compare the efficacy of Umbilical Cord Mesenchymal Stem Cell and secretome between arthroscopy and without arthroscopy intervention in OA patients. This study has 4 arms namely Arthroscopy + Booster, Arthroscopy + Pre-conditioning, Non-Arthroscopy + Booster, Non-Arthroscopy + Pre-conditioning.

NCT ID: NCT04314102 Enrolling by invitation - Quality of Life Clinical Trials

The Effect of Kinesiophobia on Spatio-temporal and Functionality in Total Knee Replacement Surgery

Start date: February 1, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational [Patient Registry]

It is stated that after arthroplasty surgery, besides the physiological factors, the factors related to the individuals may affect the recovery. Among these factors, one of the most defined in the literature is kinesiophobia. Although kinesiophobia is defined as the terms of "fear of movement" and "fear related to pain"; There are also definitions for situations in which fear of movement is most extreme or pain-related fear avoidance beliefs. Kinesiophobia, which usually occurs in the preoperative period and supports the development of chronic pain, may also affect the early recovery findings. It is very important to determine the presence and severity of kinesiophobia as it is associated with functional results after surgery. Individuals' perceptions about themselves, expectations of recovery, and personal beliefs before surgery are thought to affect recovery in the early period. In the studies conducted, it was stated that individuals with high perception about himself and the surgical process recover faster and return to activities. However, it is emphasized that studies should be conducted on the effect of individuals' personal factors such as self-efficacy, self-perception and their perspective on health on the healing process.

NCT ID: NCT04313894 Recruiting - Gonarthrosis Clinical Trials

WHARTON JELLY ORIGINATED MESENCHIAL STEM CELL in GONARTHROSIS

WHAMKO
Start date: January 1, 2019
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a progressive disease characterized by degeneration of the joint cartilage, which is involved in the immune system leading to proinflammatory cytokine and metalloproteinase release. Knee osteoarthritis is the most common form. The healing is very slow and the damage is not fully recovered, so the degeneration process continues and no treatment modalities completely remove this process. Various methods are used in the treatment of OA and total joint replacement is performed in the patients with OA recently. Ten patients with Kellgren-Lawrence grade II-III knee OA who had been applied for knee pain and received conservative treatment for 6 months and had no benefit will be taken to study. Patients will be assessed 7 (V1-7) times during the study. Clinical, immunologic and radiological treatment effectiveness and clinical improvement will be evaluated at the beginning of the treatment and in all follow-up patients participating in the study.

NCT ID: NCT04312035 Completed - Clinical trials for Osteo Arthritis Knee

Effect of Combined Interventions on Pressure Pain Threshold

Start date: March 4, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The effect of mobilizations on decrease of peripheral and central sensitivity has been proven in KOA. Furthermore, the effect of conservative therapy has also been proven in the increase of pain threshold in KOA. However, no study has investigated the effect of these interventions combined till date in KOA. The aim of the present study is to investigate the short-term and long-term effect of end-range mobilization in addition to conservative therapy on decrease of pressure pain threshold in KOA.

NCT ID: NCT04310852 Recruiting - Knee Osteoarthritis Clinical Trials

Knee Osteoarthritis Treatment With Percutaneous Injections of Autologous Bone Marrow Concentrate

Bone-Gun
Start date: June 6, 2018
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Recently there has been a growing interest in the role of subchondral bone in knee arthritis, both in its etiology and evolution and in its clinical significance. It has now been widely demonstrated that changes in the subchondral bone can develop both as a cause and as a consequence of joint degeneration and it is now accepted in the scientific community that the presence of these changes is of clinical importance, causing pain and an inflammatory state that can contribute to the evolution of arthrosis arthropathy. Recently the use of mesenchymal cells obtained from the bone marrow has been proposed for the treatment of gonarthrosis by intra-articular injections. Even more recently, treatments have been studied and proposed for the treatment of the bone-cartilage interface in knees affected by osteoarthrosis, using autologous bone marrow concentrate, with promising results.

NCT ID: NCT04308967 Completed - Clinical trials for Osteo Arthritis Knee

Central Sensitization in Knee Osteoarthritis

Start date: March 20, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The stimuli that activate nociceptors cause the dorsal horn of the spinal cord neurons to be sensitive to low-intensive afferent stimuli by decreasing the excitation threshold in patients with osteoarthritis. Although painful stimuli disappear, this situation causes pain to continue and a decrease in quality of life. Therefore, central sensitization should be considered and treated in patients with osteoarthritis. Although various pharmacological and electrophysiological agents are used in the treatment of central sensitization, adequate efficacy is not provided in patients with osteoarthritis. The aim of this study is to investigate the effects of balance exercises on central sensitization in patients with knee osteoarthritis.

NCT ID: NCT04308369 Completed - Knee Osteoarthritis Clinical Trials

Follow-up of Osteo-articular Biomarkers After Spa Therapy in a Population With Knee Osteoarthritis and Their Correlation With the Clinical Evolution

BIOMARTHROSE
Start date: September 15, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Spa therapy is used in the treatment of various diseases and mainly osteoarthritis. Knee osteoarthritis is a very common rheumatic disease whose prevalence increases with longer life span and is a public health problem. The Forestier and al. study highlighted the actual benefit and confirmed the improvement of the quality of life and pain of the knee osteoarthritis patients from 6 months of spa treatment.[1] A significant decrease of 30% in the rate of Serum Hyaluronic Acid at 6 months after the end of the spa therapy was also highlighted in the Canteloup et al study.[6] This study aims to measure different osteoarticular biomarkers (hyaluronic acid, coll2-1 and CTX1) before, at the end of the spa therapy and 6 months after the spa therapy and correlate with the clinical evaluation.

NCT ID: NCT04307251 Completed - Clinical trials for Osteoarthritis, Knee

Comparative Outcomes Between Imageless Robotic-assisted and Conventional Total Knee Arthroplasty

Start date: March 23, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The purpose of this study is to compare post-operative mechanical alignment (Hip-Knee-Ankle angle; HKA) between imageless robotic-assisted (Navio™ Robotics-assisted Surgical System) and Conventional Total Knee Arthroplasty

NCT ID: NCT04301622 Active, not recruiting - Knee Osteoarthritis Clinical Trials

Post Market Clinical Follow-Up Study for EVOLUTION® BIOFOAM® Tibia and EVOLUTION® CS/CR Porous Femur

Start date: February 3, 2020
Phase:
Study type: Observational

MicroPort (MPO) is conducting this PMCF study to evaluate the safety and effectiveness of its EVOLUTION® BIOFOAM® Tibia and EVOLUTION® Cruciate Sacrificing/Cruciate Retaining (CS/CR) Porous Femur components, including EVOLUTION® CS tibial inserts. This type of study is required by regulatory authorities for all devices that have been approved in Europe to evaluate the medium and long-term clinical evidence.

NCT ID: NCT04299568 Completed - Clinical trials for Osteo Arthritis Knee

Effects of Anti-gravity Treadmill Training on Knee Osteoarthritis in Geriatric Population.

Start date: February 28, 2020
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Knee osteoarthritis is a very common disorder affecting majority of elderly population. There is considerable functional disability associated with this disorder. The financial burden associated with this disease is quite high. Although various forms of pharmacologic and non pharmacologic therapies exist for its management, but most of these interventions only deal with symptoms without taking into account the associated factors aggravating the condition. Research suggests that abnormal loading of an arthritic joint will only increase the pain and disability. Participation in a regular exercise program involving weight bearing activities is a successful way to reduce or prevent decline in functional abilities. But the major problem with this approach lies in its abnormal loading of joint leading to altered biomechanics resulting in more joint damage. To counter this problem, lower body positive pressure or anti gravity treadmills have been designed. These treadmills provide up to 80% body weight support, thus considerably un-weighing the joint while retaining proper joint biomechanics. So with the help of this specialized training unit, elderly population will be better equipped to cope with arthritic changes leading to greater functional independence.