View clinical trials related to Knee Osteoarthritis.
Filter by:Knee osteoarthritis (OA) is one of the common diseases which causes pain and disability with increasing age. In developed countries, it is said to be one of the ten diseases which decreases functionality most.
Compare knee flexion after cruciate-retaining and cruciate substituting Total Knee Arthroplasty.
Genicular nerve block is a safe and effective therapeutic procedure for intractable pain associated with chronic knee osteoarthritis (OA). There is increasing support for the neuropathic component to the knee OA pain. Investigators proposed that targeting treatment to the underlying pain mechanism can improve pain management in knee OA. There is a debate on injectable solutions used in nerve blocks. Investigators aimed to investigate the efficacy of genicular nerve block and to determine which solution should be appropriate for patients with knee osteoarthritis who have neuropathic or nociceptive pain.
The treatment that patients with knee OA are offered varies largely. There is a need for more evidence-based individualized guidance to treatment choice for knee osteoarthritis. This study will register and evaluate the course and outcome of treatment in 5,000 patients with knee osteoarthritis. The understanding of knee OA treatment will advance in three ways: Firstly, by describing the different treatment pathways that are currently being used for knee OA. Secondly, by identifying wich individual factors that may impact the outcome of the treatment course. And finally, by conducting the economic burden related to different treatment modalities.
This study evaluates the effects arginine on osteoarthritis (OA) in adults. Participants will be randomly divided into two groups, taking arginine and nothing, respectively. Outcomes will be evaluated by lab test results on OA joint cartilage and self-administered questionnaires. The hypothesis is that arginine can slow down or reverse OA.
This double-blinded randomized control study will use kinematic and kinetic measures to compare an anatomical congruent prosthetic knee design to a standard prosthetic knee design. The patients will be measured pre- and post-operative and compared to a healthy non-osteoarthritis control group.
The study is designed to evaluate and compare the efficacy of three needles approach as a new technique in radiofrequency neurotomy of genicular nerve versus the traditional single needle approach as a treatment of advanced knee osteoarthritic pain. Primary outcome: 1. Pain intensity via the visual analogue score (VAS). 2. Function and pain via the Oxford Knee Score. Evaluated after 6 months of the procedure Secondary outcome: 1. Failure rate. 2. Incidence of any complication. 3. Total analgesic requirement during the period of follow up.
This research is being done to see if the amount of an enzyme in blood (called serum mast cell tryptase) changes before and after surgery. The investigators would like to see if these amounts are related to knee stiffness and pain in subjects that undergo a total knee replacement.
The investigators assessed overall physical activity and sleep quality in subjects with knee osteoarthritis(OA) at baseline, and at four and 12 weeks following initiation of physical therapy. Subjects received a course of manual physical therapy with interventions targeted to relevant impairments in the lower quarter. No progressive activity intervention or guidance on sleep hygiene was included. The purpose of this study was to assess a relationship between manual physical therapy and habitual physical activity and sleep behavior in individuals with knee OA.
The purpose of this study is to assist surgeons and patients in answering the question "Should I have both knees replaced at the same time, or should I just do one and wait to do the second one?"