View clinical trials related to Osteoarthritis, Knee.
Filter by:Osteoarthritis (OA) in the knee is characterized by chronic inflammatory pain that is not necessarily related to the amount of joint damage. Clinical practice guidelines recommend physical activity (PA) for osteoarthritis pain, but most adults with OA do not engage in PA. One reason for this is that while PA can reduce OA related joint pain, it does not work for everyone. PA decreases pain sensitivity for about half of adults with OA but increases pain sensitivity for the other half. The investigators are hypothesizing that individual differences in how well cells work to make energy, inflammation, and different proteins available in blood cells explains who PA will work to reduce pain and who it won't among adults with OA. The purpose of this pilot study is to determine if blood cells' ability to make cellular energy, inflammation and proteins help explain the difference about who PA reduces activity for and who it doesn't. The investigators will compare these biologic factors and pain sensitivity before walking, immediately after 30 minutes of walking (i.e. "acute") and after six weeks of walking three times a week for 30 minutes (i.e. "long-term") in adults with hip or knee osteoarthritis. The investigators will also compare these results to adults without OA. The investigators will recruit a sample of 40 adults with radiologic (e.g x-ray or CT scan) evidence of hip or knee OA and 20 age/gender matched healthy adults without OA to address the following study aims: Aim 1: To examine the effects of a six week (three days/week) walking program on pain in adults with OA as compared to healthy controls. Aim 2: To test the cells' ability to make energy as a mechanism for variation in pain after "acute" and "long-term" PA in older adults with lower extremity osteoarthritis. Aim3: To test the role of inflammation as a mechanism for variation in pain after "acute" and "long-term" physical activity in adults with lower extremity osteoarthritis. Aim 4: To generate hypotheses regarding the role of proteomics in variation in pain after "acute" and "long-term" physical activity.
This is a double-blind placebo controlled trial whose objective is to understand how much the radial extracorporeal shockwave therapy can improve function of patients with knee osteoarthritis. For this trial, patients with knee osteoarthritis, after signing the informed consent form and having their demographic and baseline information collected, will be randomly allocated into one of both treatment arms: radial extracorporeal shockwave therapy (rESWT) or sham radial extracorporeal shockwave therapy. Then, they will undertake three sessions of rESWT, for three weeks, i.e. one session per week. Patients will be assessed prior to the therapy, one week after the end of the therapy and three months after the end of the therapy, and the primary outcome of this study is the functional change measured by the Knee injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score (KOOS) validated in Portuguese, three months after the end of the therapy. Secondary outcomes, will be the change of pain, the change of pressure pain tolerance threshold, change in diffuse noxious inhibitory control (DNIC), and thermographic changes.
Analyze the results of cooled radiofrequency in patients with chronic knee pain after one year of follow- up.
The present randomized controlled trial is designed to compare one novel total knee replacement (TKR) design and two conventional TKR designs in terms of functional outcome. 80 patients will be randomized in each of the three arms (240 altogether).
Background: Total knee arthroplasty (TKA) is one of the most common operations in orthopedics. After surgery, the decline of bone mineral density and muscle mass was proved, oral bisphosphonate is commonly used to prevent BMD loss in clinic treatment, however, the loss of muscle mass can only be maintained with exercise intervention. The goals of TKA rehabilitation should be based on control pain, improve ambulation, maximize the range of motion, develop muscle strength, and provide emotional support. We planned to find out a potential adjuvant effective option in muscle mass for the management of post-TKA. Literature suggested that exercise training has been found to have the considerable effect on TKA. However, no suitable exercise prescription was established on the scientific basis. The current study aimed to find out a potential treatment mode. Study Rationale: This project will be performed for consecutive three years, the patients with post-TKA patients are managed with the treadmill exercise training in the first year. In the second year, resistance exercise is prescribed. In the third year, eccentric exercise plus resistance training will be arranged in the exercise group. We will analyze the data of the three years and cross-comparative analysis. A prescription of exercise training, a period of 24 weeks each year, 3 times a week, for each 10 minutes warm-up, 40 minutes exercise training, and 10-minute cool down for exercise prescription Study Objectives: To investigate the effect of long-term exercise training, eccentric and resistance exercise on muscle mass in patients with total knee arthroplasty. To monitor the performance index included: physiological indices, muscle mass, ambulation and the quality of life index. Study Design Duration of Treatment: Total of 6-month exercise intervention in each year. The number of Planned Patients: 35 subjects in each control and exercise group in one year, the total of 210 subjects in three years. Investigational Product: Automated biochemistry analyzer, Biospace Inbody 7.20 Analysis of body composition instrumentation; Dual Energy X-ray Absorptiometer (DEXA), isokinetic muscle strength measurement, VICON to analysis ambulation, functional fitness, the questionnaire including SF-36, KOOS and VAS pain score. Endpoints: Data collection in pre-surgery, 3 months, 6 months, 9 months and 12 months after surgery.
Physical inactivity is a major risk behaviour with a potential for causing premature death, particularly among people with mobility limitations, such as knee osteoarthritis. Digital motivational interventions (such as SMS) can motive to a healthy behaviour including increased physical activity. The purpose of this study is to investigate if motivational text messages following an exercise intervention to improve mobility limitations will change the physical activity level in patients with knee osteoarthritis. This study is designed as pilot randomized controlled trial, with equal randomization (1:1). Eligible participants will be randomised into one of two groups (intervention or control) after completing their baseline measurements. The intervention group will receive weekly motivational text messages and the control group will not receive any attention from the study.
The purpose of this study is to compare the pain, functioning and pain medication consumption of knee osteoarthritis (OA) patients who have allogenic cytokines derived from human amniotic membranes (HAM) and allogenic mesenchymal stem cells derived from human umbilical cord Wharton's Jelly (HUMCWJ) implanted into the affected knee with knee OA patients who self-select to be in a non-intervention control group.
Assessment of the effect of spa treatment on the functional severity of arthrosis. Official title: Evolution of clinical state of patients with rheumatic disease on lower limbs or rachis, 6 months after spa treatment. Primary outcome measure: - Measuring the effect of spa treatment on functional severity of arthrosis - Proportion of patients with a WOMAC score augmented by 9 or more, 6 months after enrollment (minimal clinically important difference) Secondary outcome measures - Quantitative evaluation of pain - Comparison of mean Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) pain scale between enrollment and 6 months after - Quantitative evaluation of WOMAC - Comparison of mean WOMAC between enrollment and 6 months after - Impact of spa treatment on the patient's metabolism - Height and Weight (BMI calculation) - Blood pressure - Heart rate - Quality of life - 36-Item Short Form (SF36) at enrollment, 3 months and 6 months - EuroQol 5 Dimensions (EQ5D) questionnaire at enrollment, 3 months and 6 months - Opinion of doctor and patient - Semi-quantitative scale collected at enrollment, 3 months and 6 months - Treatment follow-up - Self-evaluation of pain - Self-evaluation of pain with VAS pain scale every 6 week
The purpose of this study is to determine the best strategy of administering gabapentin in connection with our current approach to perioperative pain management. We aim to evaluate two different adjunct gabapentin regimens given in the perioperative period, and to identify which manages patient pain more effectively and safely. In this evaluation, we will identify the quantity of patients' opioid consumption, the quality of their pain management, and the frequency and severity of any side effects they might experience. Patients who are undergoing total knee replacement (TKR) and choose to participate will be randomly assigned to a treatment group using computer-generated randomization. Patients in group 1 (the control group) will receive the standard of care as pertains to gabapentin. This consists of a single 600 mg dose of gabapentin administered to the patient approximately one to two hours before surgery, then a dose of 600 mg each morning during postoperative admission. Patients in Group 2 will receive 600 mg preoperatively, plus an additional postoperative gabapentin regimen: they will take 300 mg of gabapentin every 8 hours for 1 week, then a single nightly dose of 300 mg for another month.
This crossover designed study evaluates the effects of microcurrent therapy on knee osteoarthritis. Ín a previous study patients were randomized into four different groups. Group 1 and 2 both received microcurrent therapy, but with different freqency and intensity parameters. Group 3 received treatment with the microcurrent treatment apparatus without current (sham). group 4 was a control group. In the following, present study the controll group as well as the sham group will receive the microcurrent therapy (verum).