View clinical trials related to Arthropathy of Knee Joint.
Filter by:Several authors and large registries have suggested the potential for an increased risk of all-cause revision with the use of posterior cruciate-substitution (PS) total knee arthroplasty (TKA). The purpose of the current study was to compare posterior cruciate retaining (CR) and PS implants with respect to the functional and radiographic results, prevalence of osteolysis, revision rates and survivorship.
This study is to conduct a prospective randomized controlled trial to investigate the blood-conservation effect of combination of intravenous TXA and QCG in a primary TKA procedure.
Naldebain, a long-acting analgesic injection, obtained a license from the Taiwan Food and Drug Administration (TFDA) of the Ministry of Health and Welfare on March 6, 2017 to approve a sustained-release long-acting analgesic on the market in Taiwan. This study hopes to use a rigorous double-blind randomized controlled experiment to understand whether the new sustained-release analgesic Naldebain can achieve effective pain relief for patients undergoing knee replacement surgery, and to evaluate the patient's functional recovery status .
Patients with degenerative joint disease can effectively be treated with a primary total knee replacement to reduce pain and improve function in their daily lives. Theoretically, achievement of normal knee motion using a medial pivot design in total knee replacements can be recreated in comparison to single radius designs, which could lead to an improvement in post-surgical outcomes and satisfaction with the procedure. The aim of this study is to compare two types of implant designs (medial pivot and single radius) in a total knee replacement using clinical outcomes, patient reported outcomes, and overall function assessed by a specialized gait laboratory.
To compare the functional outcomes of Computer-Assisted Navigation (CAS) and Conventional Instrumentation TKA at the 8-year follow-up.
To prove that total knee arthroplasty can be performed with little, if any need for opioids by using a combination of patient education, optimized pre-op and post-op pain and recovery protocols. The goal being opioid-free total knee arthroplasty.
The mission is to develop novel interventions to improve cognitive function, and thereby reducing delirium in hospitalized patients to improve perioperative outcomes. Delirium affects up to 42% of hospitalized patients and disproportionately increases morbidity and mortality in older adults, especially after surgical procedures. Current approaches prevent only 30-40% of delirium cases. The goal is to use prehabilitation (an individualized exercise regimen performed in the 2-4 weeks prior to admission) to improve peri-operative cognitive status, mobility and recovery. Based on preliminary data, the investigators propose to deeply phenotype patients, meaning to study the patient, the disease and surgery in a very detailed fashion, with elective knee or hip replacement surgery and use a personalized prehabilitation intervention compared to standard pre-operative care. To facilitate data collection over the course of the study, the investigators use wearable devices and mobile phone applications.
The purpose of this study is to determine whether or not giving a lower dose of antibiotics (Vancomycin) in the area where it is needed (the knee joint) is more effective at obtaining adequate tissue levels of the antibiotic than the current standard dose which is given intravenously (IV) through a wrist vein. The use of intraosseous regional administration (IORA) of vancomycin requires the use of a tourniquet for the duration of the procedure. Many surgeons prefer to perform the surgery with tourniquet use minimised or without a tourniquet at all. The aim of this study is to evaluate whether IORA vancomycin can achieve effective tissue concentrations with tourniquet use minimised.
Previous retrospective database studies suggest that total knee arthroplasty (TKA) surgery under spinal anesthesia has less complications than when performed under general anesthesia. In general, complications are rare and both anesthesia types are widely accepted. In Finland, total knee arthroplasty has typically been performed under spinal anesthesia. In a recent prospective randomized controlled study, total knee arthroplasty under general anesthesia resulted in less acute postoperative pain (opioid-need measured by patient-controlled anesthesia), less nausea, and faster hospital discharge than that performed under spinal anesthesia. Also the use of surgical tourniquet can affect surgical outcome: it may reduce bleeding and surgery time, but it may also cause weakness of thigh muscles and thus hinder mobilization. In a recent study, both techniques with and without surgical tourniquet appeared equal. The aims of this study are to compare total knee arthroplasty under spinal or general anesthesia, with or without surgical tourniquet, in relation to acute and chronic postoperative pain, nausea, knee function, patient reported quality of life and satisfaction on care, complications, length of stay, and need of surgical unit resources. This randomized controlled study includes 400 patients with informed consent, 18-75-years-of-age, standard primary total knee arthroplasty operation, American Society of Anesthesiologist (ASA) physical status classification I-III, body mass index under 40, and no contraindications for medications or treatments used. The hypothesis of this study are used to reassess best practices of primary total knee arthroplasty operation to enhance quality of care, patient outcomes and satisfaction, and availability of surgery due to better patient flow at surgical unit.
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.