View clinical trials related to Osteoarthritis, Knee.
Filter by:The aim of this study is to confirm the biomechanical effects and evaluate functional benefits of a new knee brace combining valgus inducing effect on medial compartment and leg external rotation during the stance phase in patients with symptomatic medial knee osteoarthritis.
Articular cartilage can be the seat of many diseases including osteoarthritis and traumatic defaults. The cartilage has no intrinsic ability to repair resulting at long term in function loss in the joints. Currently available treatments are not satisfactory in the long term, the use of mesenchymal stem cells appears to be promising due to their ability to multipotency and immunomodulation properties. This project aims to determine the most appropriate source for regenerative medicine of cartilage stem cells from tissue taken during arthroplasty in patients with osteoarthritis. These cells will be tested for different chondrogenic markers. The success of this project will consider the implementation of a strategy for regenerative medicine in bone and joint diseases.
The aim of the study is to evaluate the efficacy of a wearable device using pulse electromagnetic fields on pain intensity reduction, measured by visual analogue score (VAS) and Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index (WOMAC), in patients affected by osteoarthritis Secondary aim is the evaluate the effect on knee effusion reduction, when present and to evaluate pain intensity changes corrected by pain threshold measured by pressure algometry.
Patient specific instrumentation is an alternative to conventional intra- and extra-medullary guides to perform the femoral and tibial cuts in total knee replacement (TKR). This instrumentation could provide a better alignment of a TKR, reduce blood losses and operative time, and improve clinical outcomes. The primary goal of this study is to compare the femorotibial mismatch angle of two groups of patients: patients undergoing posterior stabilized, fixed bearing TKR with conventional Attune® instrumentation (DePuy Johnson & Johnson, Warsaw, Indiana), versus patient undergoing TKR with the TruMatch® (DePuy Johnson & Johnson, Warsaw, Indiana) cutting guide.
The proposed study is a multi-center, randomized, double blind (patient and assessor), sham controlled clinical trial using a parallel 2 group design recruiting 220 patients of at least 18 years of age. The investigators will include patients presenting with clinically and radiologically diagnosed knee OA according to the criteria of the American College of Rheumatology, who experienced knee pain lasting for at least six months, and were diagnosed with radiographic severity of ≥ 2 on the Kellgren-Lawrence grading system or had one or more of the following signs and symptoms in the knee; restricted range of motion, pain in motion, crepitations, morning stiffness. Patients will be randomly allocated to receive TENS or sham TENS for 3 weeks.
Corticosteroid and Hylan G-F 20 are both effective in improving pain and function of osteoarthritic knee patients.
This trial is a multi-center, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, parallel, phase II clinical trial and aimed at osteoarthritis of the knee. Patients who signed informed consent voluntarily and eligible for this study are assigned randomly to one of 3 groups after 2 week-Washout period. 1. st group (experimental) : WIN-34B 450mg BID 2. nd group (experimental) : WIN-34B 900mg BID 3. rd group (Comparator) : Placebo BID Patients will take WIN-34B or Placebo BID for 12 weeks. Based on baseline, after 4 weeks(Visit 3) and 12 weeks(Visit 5), Researchers check patients' physical examination, questionnaire, laboratory experiment. After 8 weeks(Visit 4), researchers check adverse effects and current medication status via telephone interview. After 12 weeks(Visit 5) patients stop taking drugs and after 16 weeks(Visit 6) researchers check patients' physical examination, questionnaire, adverse effects and current medication status.
PURPOSE: To investigate the natural time course of patient-reported outcomes after meniscus surgery and identify factors associated with good and bad outcome after surgery.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the immediate and short-term effects of the combination of lateral customized foot orthoses on the pain and medial knee loading during gait among medial knee osteoarthritis patients. The effects of the combination is compared to the single use of these devices. The investigators recruited 22 knee osteoarthritis. They have to wear each of treatments (foot orthoses, knee brace and combination) during three months. A fifteen days wash-out period is given after each three months. Biomechanical evaluation is carried out before and after each three months. This evaluation consisted of three questionnaires (Knee Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS), Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index ( WOMAC) and Medical Outcome Study Short Form-36( MOS-SF36)), a motion analysis with an optoelectronic system, then a 6-min walk test. During motion analysis, ten gait trials are executed without treatment and ten with the treatment.
The purpose of this study is to evaluate the immediate effects of a knee brace with a new mechanism on the pain and medial knee loading during gait among medial knee osteoarthritis patients. The effects of this new brace is compared to a stabilizing brace and a typical valgus knee brace. The investigators recruited 24 knee osteoarthritis and they have to wear each of the three braces during three months. A fifteen days wash-out period is given after each three months. Biomechanical evaluation is carried out before and after each three months. This evaluation consisted of three questionnaires (KOOS, WOMAC and Medical Outcome Score Short Form-36 (MOS-SF36)), a motion analysis with an optoelectronic system, then a 6-min walk test. During motion analysis, ten gait trials are executed without brace and ten with the brace.