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Active clinical trials for "Joint Diseases"

Results 101-110 of 701

Intra-articular I-PRF Injections in Patients With Temporomandibular Joint Dysfunction

Temporomandibular Joint DisordersTemporomandibular Joint Pain

The aim of the study will be to analyze the results of injection treatment in patients diagnosed with temporomandibular joint dysfunction manifested by pain and/or limited jaw mobility. The treatment will consist in the administration of autologous blood products into the cavities of the temporomandibular joints.

Not yet recruiting9 enrollment criteria

Restricting Blood Flow in Improving Muscle Strength in Patients With Hemophilic Arthropathy

Hemophilia

Background. The main physical sequela of patients with hemophilia is the development of a progressive, degenerative intra-articular lesion, known as hemophilic arthropathy). This sequela is manifested by chronic pain, limited range of motion, axial abnormalities, and periarticular muscle atrophy. Objective. To assess the safety and effectiveness of an intervention through blood flow restriction, regarding the frequency of bleeding and the improvement in the perception of muscle activation and strength, functionality, joint pain, joint status and the perception of quality of life in patients with hemophilic arthropathy. knee and ankle. Study design. Randomized, multicenter, single-blind clinical study. Method. 60 patients with hemophilia A and B will be recruited in this study. Patients will be recruited in 3 regions of Spain. The dependent variables will be: bleeding frequency (self-registration), pain (measured with the visual analog scale and pressure algometer), quality of life (SF-36 scale), joint status (Hemophilia Joint Health Score scale), strength (dynamometer) and muscle activation (surface electromyograph) and functionality (6-Minutes Walking test, Quick Disabilities of the arm, shoulder and hand). Three evaluations will be carried out: pre-treatment, post-treatment and after a follow-up period of 4 weeks. Expected results. Observe the safety of blood flow restriction in hemophilia patients. To analyze the efficacy of blood flow restriction in improving muscle strength and activation, chronic pain, functionality, and the perception of quality of life in patients with hemophilic knee and ankle arthropathy.

Not yet recruiting9 enrollment criteria

Safety and Performance Assessment of the SYMBOL Range of Medical Devices in Patients Underlying...

Degenerative Hip Joint DiseasePost-traumatic Osteoarthritis4 more

The purpose of this post-market clinical follow up study is to assess the safety and effectiveness of the SYMBOL range of medical devices. The study will evaluate the outcome of Total Hip Arthroplasty using medical devices from SYMBOL range over a period of 10 years.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Validation of a Standardized Tool for Evaluation Function of Patients With TMD

Temporomandibular Joint Disorders

Temporo-Mandibular Disorders (TMD) are the reason for consultation on more common in maxillofacial. However, there is no consensus on their care. For a long time, Rehabilitative management of the TMD was content to treat only the symptoms. No validated score does not allow to evaluate globally the malfunctions at the origin of the TDM, as well as the symptoms and functional discomfort that result. The creation of such a tool would standardize the physical examination of the physiotherapist. This is a functional evaluation scale including 2 subparts: an examination of functional etiologies and an assessment of symptoms. At the same time, a self-questionnaire was created to gather the patient's feelings and evaluate the impact of the TMD on his life daily. The outcome of this research would be to create a score to track the patient's progress during the reeducation, trying to rate the different factors according to their number and severity. This tool would then make it possible to objectify the impact of rehabilitation treatment on the factors etiological and verify the effectiveness of rehabilitation protocols.

Recruiting21 enrollment criteria

Quadratus Lumborum Type 2 as Chronic Hip Pain Treatment

Hip ArthropathyChronic Hip Pain1 more

The main objective of the study is to assess whether the performance of type 2 quadratus lumborum block produces an improvement in the quality of life of the patient with osteoarthritis of the hip.

Recruiting11 enrollment criteria

A Comparison Of Primary TKA Rehabilitation Using A Smart Orthotic Versus Outpatient Physical Therapy...

Arthropathy of Knee

This will be a prospective, randomized, noninferiority clinical trial comparing rehabilitation methods post-total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Population of interest is adult hip/knee clinic patients over age 18 who are indicated for unilateral primary total knee arthroplasty. All TKA patients are prescribed physical therapy (PT) for rehabilitation post-operatively. The investigators will compare this current treatment with a new, validated, wearable smart knee brace (FM2 Knee Brace) that can be used for rehabilitation post-TKA. Following enrollment in the study, the investigators will match and randomize participants into two cohorts (outpatient PT versus FM2 Knee Brace). Outpatient PT group will be prescribed routine six-week course of outpatient PT (no pool exercises, remainder at therapist's discretion) to start as soon as possible upon discharge. The FM2 Knee Brace group will complete device set up at pre-op visit and will be prescribed 3-4 exercises to complete at their discretion over six weeks. The investigators will collect measurements of knee flexion, extension, total arc of motion at pre-op visit and at 6-week, 3-month, and 1-year post-op visits. The investigators will also plan to record additional PROs, therapy compliance, and complication rates. The investigators will compare the two groups to test whether the new FM2 Knee Brace is noninferior to regular PT when recovering from TKA, and if the new technology could be an alternative to outpatient PT.

Recruiting7 enrollment criteria

Patient Blood Management in Orthopedic Surgical Patients in Turkey

Arthropathy

Transfusion practice for surgical patients has changed from replacing surgically lost blood with allogeneic blood transfusions to implementing strategies that reduce transfusion requirements. Patient Blood Management (PBM), which is "the timely application of evidence-based medical and surgical concepts designed to maintain haemoglobin concentration, optimize hemostasis and minimize blood loss in an effort to improve patient outcome. There is mounting evidence that multimodal patient blood management (PBM) programmes can be effective at improving postoperative outcomes and reducing perioperative blood transfusions and costs The Turkish Society of Anaesthesiologists PBM Task Force has been working on this subject and studied transfusion practice throughout all through the peri-operative periods. Unfortunately we documented a high transfusion rate in major surgical patients in Turkey. One of the surgeries, that has high transfusion rate, was orthopaedic surgery. According to our recent data we planned to implement PBM in major orthopaedic surgical patients and evaluate the effects PBM in transfusion rate and patient outcomes. While some elements of PBM have a strong evidence base in hip or knee replacement, such as the use of tranexamic acid (TXA) the evidence for preoperative anaemia optimisation with iron is less robust. Implementing PBM all through the operative period gains more importance.

Recruiting22 enrollment criteria

The Effects of Sacroiliac Joint Dysfunction on Gait and Disability

Chronic Low-back PainSacroiliac Joint Dysfunction3 more

It has been reported that gait coordination changes in patients with chronic low back pain, walking slower, taking shorter steps and having asymmetrical stride lengths compared to their healthy peers. In addition to many factor cause gait dysfunction, sacroiliac joint dysfunction might be one of reason of these problems. A study examining the effects of sacroiliac joint dysfunction on gait and disability in individuals with chronic low back pain has not been found in the literature. Therefore, the aim of this study is to evaluate the gait parameters and disability of individuals with chronic low back pain and to reveal their relationship with sacroiliac joint dysfunction.

Recruiting12 enrollment criteria

Manual Therapy in the Treatment of Hemophilic Arthropathy of the Ankle

Hemophilia

Introduction: Hemophilic ankle arthropathy is manifested by degenerative functional alterations (deficit of muscle strength, mobility and proprioception), intra-articular alterations and chronic pain. Manual therapy techniques are used to treat soft tissue adhesions, relieve pain and reduce tissue sensitivity. Design. Case-control, pilot, and randomized clinical trial. Aimed: To evaluate the safety and effectiveness of a protocol by manual therapy techniques in patients with hemophilic ankle arthropathy. Patients: 100 patients with ankle arthropathy will be recruited for inclusion in the study. Patients will be recruited in seven centers, from different regions of Spain. Intervention: Each session will last approximately 50-60 minutes, with 1 physiotherapy session per week for a period of 3 weeks. Patients will be evaluated at baseline, after the intervention, and after a follow-up period of 6 weeks. The treatment program includes 10 exercises that must be administered bilaterally. Measuring instruments and study variables: Visual Analog Scale and pressure algometer (joint pain); digital goniometer (ankle range of motion); Haemophilia Joint Health Score (joint health); dynamometer assess (muscle strength); 2 Minute Walk Test (functionality); and biomechanical gait evaluation. At the same time, the study will allow to determine joint bleeding caused by applied physiotherapy treatment. Expected results: To demonstrate the safety of this Physiotherapy technique in patients with hemophilia. Likewise, an improvement in ankle pain, joint motion, joint health, strength, functionality and gait analysis.

Active8 enrollment criteria

Restoration Anatomic Acetabular Shell Revision Study

ArthropathyHip Arthropathy1 more

This study will be a non-randomized, ambidirectional (retrospective and prospective) study where all subjects will be followed prospectively. The study will evaluate the survivorship of the RAS acetabular component in a previously failed total hip arthroplasty (THA) in a consecutive series of subjects who meet the eligibility criteria.

Not yet recruiting14 enrollment criteria
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