View clinical trials related to Knee Osteoarthritis.
Filter by:Evaluation of safety, tolerability, and efficacy of a single intra-articular (IA) injection of PTP-001, an allogeneic placental tissue particulate, in individuals with knee osteoarthritis (OA).
The goal of this study is to perform a feasibility study to show the effectiveness of the genicular artery embolization procedure in reducing bilateral or unilateral osteoarthritic knee pain at 12 months as measured by WOMAC (Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index) score, Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome (KOOS) score, and Oswestry Disability Index.
The study aims to evaluate the therapeutic effect of the Tui-na and oral Chinese medicine on the treatment of KOA. This is a prospective, randomized wait-list controlled trial in patients with knee osteoarthritis (KOA). After 2 weeks screening period, eligible subjects will be randomly assigned to the treatment group and wait-list control group in 1:1 ratio. Subjects will have 4-week of treatment, and then a 4-week follow-up.
The purpose of this follow-up study is to investigate the efficacy and safety of autologous Adipose Tissue derived Mesenchymal stem cells (JOINTSTEM®) in patient with severe Knee Osteoarthritis.
The mobile bearing unicompartmental knee arthroplasty has shown excellent clinical outcome and survivorship. However, some studies have shown that the patients still had medial knee pain and shown worst the clinical outcome, even though the survivorship was excellent. The medial knee pain after operation was the one cause of revision. The incidence of medial knee pain was 0%-9%. The cause of medial knee pain was overloading on the medial plateau, local inflammation, over hanging of the tibial component and overstretching of the MCL due to the application of excessive polyethylene. Therefore, the tibia in this study was cut with under resection technique for reducing the overloading on the medial tibial plateau. The purpose of this study is to compare medial knee pain between tibial bone cut preservation technique and conventional tibial bone cut technique following mobile bearing UKA.
This is a prospective, multi-location safety and effectiveness study, and data registry of autologous adult ADRCs generated by the Transpose® RT System in subjects with OA in the shoulder, wrist, knee, hip, or ankle.
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.
The purpose of the present pilot study is to evaluate, through gait analysis and rating scales, the functional outcome during the execution of motor tasks with high functional demand such as walking on an unstable surface, stair ascent and descent, maximal knee flexion under load (lunge) on a sample of 20 subjects candidates to cemented total knee arthroplasty with MP design at the Orthopedic and Traumatology Clinic 2nd of the Rizzoli Orthopedic Institute. The parameters obtained will be compared with the parameters of healthy subjects comparable by age and Body Max Index (BMI) already acquired at the Movement Analysis Laboratory of the Rizzoli Orthopedic Institute, where the study will be conducted. On the day of admission to the ward (generally the day before the scheduled surgery), the enrolled patients will undergo the evaluation scales and gait analysis at the Institute's Movement Analysis Laboratory. The patients will be operated by the team of the Traumatological Orthopedic Clinic 2nd through the implantation of a cemented total knee prosthesis MP (Evolution medial-pivot knee system, MicroPort Orthopedics). Anterior knee access with medial para-patellar capsulotomy and standard instruments will be used according to current standards of good clinical practice. In the post-operative period, patients will carry out post-surgical rehabilitation following normal clinical practice. The patients will be re-evaluated at a 6-month follow-up through gait analysis and evaluation scales on the occasion of the control visit that takes place, according to the normal clinical practice at the Institute.
This is a single-arm clinical trial to investigate the outcome of exercise-based physical therapy in people with knee osteoarthritis through the use of wearable sensors.
This study is a multicenter non-randomized single-blind controlled trial, aimed at investigating the feasibility and efficacy of hydrotherapy based on IVR, for the patients with TKR(Total Knee Replacement), on the function, gait performance, postural balance control, and knee edema reduction. The protocol was draft according to the Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT ) checklists. A total of 96patients with total knee prosthesis will be recruited and divided into three groups, to receive a traditional rehabilitation (TR) program, traditional hydrotherapy (TH)or hydrotherapy through immersive virtual reality (HIVR) using Bts-Nirvana. Assessments will be performed at baseline and at the end of treatment.