View clinical trials related to Osteoarthritis, Hip.
Filter by:The START study will implement osteoarthritis (OA) treatment recommendations to increase the use of recommended treatment modalities and reduce non-desired events (e.g. unnecessary referrals to secondary care, unnecessary use of costly imaging modalities and use of treatment modalities supported by low quality of evidence). The purpose of the STavanger osteoARThritis (START) study is to improve the quality of OA care and increase the collaboration between health care professionals in primary health care and across health care levels.
The current management of osteoarthritis is based on non-pharmacological and pharmacological means which include intra-articular injections. The recommendations on the management of hip osteoarthritis stipulate that intra-articular injections of corticosteroid may be considered in patients with an exacerbation not responding to oral treatments. Several recent studies show the effectiveness of intra-articular corticosteroids compared with anesthetics. The intra-articular injection of viscosupplementation alone has never been validated in this indication since controlled studies did not show efficacy over placebo. At present, viscosupplementation is considered an anti-osteoarthritic symptomatic slow-acting and its interest is not yet established in hip osteoarthritis.
This is a multicenter, non-controlled, prospective study. 303 subjects (GTS standard and lateralized) have been recruited. Study will be conducted in centers across Europe.
This is a prospective open-label clinical study of 50 patients to determine safety and treatment potential of autologous cell therapy for pain and inflammation associated with Osteoarthritis of the hip. Follow-up will consist of a larger sample including 4,000 patients.
To evaluate effectiveness and safety of HHRS in subjects undergoing total hip arthroplasty (THA). Effectiveness will be evaluated using patient-reported, clinical, radiologic, and radiostereometric outcomes. Safety will be evaluated through the collection of device-related and unanticipated device-related adverse events.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of a functional task-training program combined with therapeutic ultrasound on pain, strength, gait biomechanics and functionality in adults with hip osteoarthritis.
Several authors explain as the kinesiophobia plays an important role for the recovery after orthopaedic surgery. The aim of the investigators study is to investigate if the kinesiophobia is able to influence the early recovery after total hip arthroplasty. The early recovery will be measured by the ILOA Score. The Tampa Scale of Kinesiophobia will measure the fear level of movement. All the other variable that could influence the ILOA Score are identified and collected: age, sex, body max index, ability of patient pre-surgery, type of anesthesia, length of stay, pain, haemoglobin, possible complications.
The purpose of our study is to evaluate the differences in functional activities and proprioception after surgery in subjects who underwent hip prosthesis implant with capsulotomy or capsulectomy.
In recent years, short femoral stems have been introduced. Short stems are designed based on traditional stems with good clinical results. The assumed benefit of short stems is that they are easier to use in mini-invasive surgery, and that preservation of proximal periprosthetic bone stock is better. Preservation of periprosthetic bone in the proximal femur is thought to secure long time anchoring of the implant, and reduce the risk of loosening. In addition, a good proximal bone stock makes later revision surgery less technically demanding. However, the short stem design could compromise the stability of the prosthesis, and there has been reported diverging results regarding correct positioning of short stems. This may be due to the lack of inherent aiming provided by the tip of the traditional long stems. We want to clinically evaluate the stability and bone remodelling pattern of a new short femoral stem based on a standard stem with excellent long time results. In addition we will compare the two different stems regarding positioning, when using a newly developed guiding broach for the short stem, and the standard broach for the long stem. Finally, patient reported clinical outcome scores will be evaluated with respect to implant and biomechanical reconstruction. The aim of this study is to evaluate whether this specific short femoral stem is stable, safe to use, and if it provides the expected beneficial effects on bone remodelling.
This study is a 2X2 factorial randomized trial that will the examine the comparative effectiveness of two patient decision aids for hip and knee osteoarthritis (OA) as well as the impact of a surgeon-focused intervention.