View clinical trials related to Joint Pain.
Filter by:Analysis of patellar positioning in the trochlear groove after TKA with and without the use of dynamic tensioner.
The present study is a randomized, placebo-controlled, parallel-group, double-blind (double-dummy) clinical study. Not more than 210 individuals will be screened, and considering a screening failure rate of 18%, approximately 168 participants will be randomized in a ratio of 1:1:1 to receive E-PR-01 (LD: 200 mg/day), E-PR-01 (HD: 400 mg/day), or placebo (400 mg/day). After accounting for a dropout/withdrawal rate of 15%, each group will have at least 48 completed participants with equal numbers of participants having knee and lumbo-sacral as index joint. The intervention duration for all the study participants will be approximately 90 days.
Cervical facet joints have been implicated as a source of chronic pain in 54-67 % patients with chronic posterior neck pain.1 Intraarticular injections, medial branch nerve blocks and neurolysis of medial branch nerves have been described in managing chronic neck pain of facet joint origin.2 The evidence for long-term therapeutic benefits of intraarticular injections of facet joints is limited. Medial branch nerve blocks show moderate evidence of long-term benefit with evidence of side effects.3 Paraneuraxial nerve blocks have become very popular clinically, due to their clinical and anatomical characteristics. These techniques are comparable to neuraxial nerve blocks in terms of success rate and analgesic efficacy and may confer many of advantages over neuraxial nerve blocks.4 Retrolaminar blocks are among this family that are near but not within the neuraxis like spinals or epidurals.5 Most reports and studies of retrolaminar blocks have been in the context of anesthesia for truncal surgery and truncal pain syndromes (thoracic and abdominal).6 Postoperative and pain treatment cervical retrolaminar blocks studies are currently sparse.7 The major advantage of this technique is minimizing or even eliminating the risk of pneumothorax. Additionally, the risks of nerve root damage and inadvertent injection into a dural sleeve, an intervertebral foramen, or the epidural or intrathecal spaces should also be decreased.8
This Clinical trial study for the effect of a product E-PR-01 will be studied for its ability to attain rapid pain relief in the individuals suffering from exercise-induced knee joint pain, as well as determine its sustained effect on pain reduction over a treatment period of five days.
This study will compare the impact of the Yeahhh Baby! Ointment, as compared to a placebo, on measures of joint pain and discomfort in those who regularly experience joint pain. The hypothesis is that perceived pain will be reduced when subjects use the Yeahhh Baby! Ointment. Previous studies exploring the efficacy of topicals on joint pain relief have used a similar design and similar joint pain assessments as employed herein (The Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Arthritis Index [WOMAC] and visual analog scale [VAS] for pain).
In this study, the impact of 900 mg Cyplexinol® taken daily on joint pain over a period of 15 days in comparison with a placebo will be determined using a cross-over double blind design with a 13 day wash out period. In addition, we will measure cytokine production and related variables during the two hour after subjects ingest a single dosage of Cyplexinol® or placebo on days 1 and 15.
The proposed research will be a prospective, observational study to test the hypothesis that anchoring will affect verbal pain scores in the emergency department. There will be a small retrospective aspect to this study to obtain patient satisfaction ratings.
Musculoskeletal pain is a common affection due to ageing, sedentarism and intense exercise practice causing acute and chronic injuries. The main objective of this trial is to prove efficacy of a natural topical composition containing Arnica montana, Hypericum perforatum, Calendula officinalis, Melaleuca sp. and menthol in pain management in adults with acute or chronic pain. This randomized, double-blinded and placebo-controlled trial will include 200 patients with musculoskeletal pain, 100 in the intervention group receiving the topical formula and 100 in the placebo group, who will receive a similar formula without active ingredients. The products will be applied topically twice daily for 14 days in areas with moderate or severe pain. The study objectives are immediate and long-term pain alleviation, stiffness perception joint mobility, and general recovery perception.
The objective of the study is to test the capacity of a 12-weeks Turmipure GOLD® supplementation to reduce joint discomfort.
Interventional, randomised, prospective, monocentric study