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Active clinical trials for "Musculoskeletal Diseases"

Results 71-80 of 459

Examining Capacity Building of Youth With Physical Disabilities to Pursue Participation Following...

Spinal Cord InjuriesSpina Bifida4 more

The goal of this clinical trial is to learn about how a participation-based intervention builds capacity of youth with physical disabilities to pursue activities of their choice in the community. The investigators plan to examine in what ways working with a therapist to set up and engage in an 8-week self-chosen community-based activity builds capacity of youth with physical disabilities to pursue a new activity of their choice in the community without the support of a therapist. During this study, participants will be followed for 26 weeks. Youth will work with an occupational therapist (OT). In the first week, the OT will meet with youth to set a community-based leisure goal. Examples of activities could include music, sports, cooking lessons, painting, or photography, in the youth's community. The OT will work with youth to identify and remove barriers. They will also adapt the activity to help youth do the activity for 8 weeks. During this time, the OT will perform site visits to consult and support youths' involvement as needed. (Weeks #1-8) Youth will have a four-week break after completing their first activity. (Weeks #9-12). Then, youth will be asked to choose a second (new) activity. They will try to start this activity for 8 weeks without the OT. (Weeks #13-20) At the end of these 8 weeks, the same therapist will help the youth for 6 weeks if needed to do their second activity. (Weeks #21-26) Youth will be asked to complete the following online: A standard demographic questionnaire (during the first meeting). Rate their perceived performance in the chosen activity once a week. A questionnaire about their daily participation in the community. This will be done at the start and end of the study. A questionnaire about how well they feel they are able to do things. This will be done three times. Share steps they take to participate in the activity. This will be done through a weekly diary entry. In addition, three one-on-one interviews (for about an hour each) will be done remotely (using Microsoft TEAMS) to share their experience pursuing their selected activities. Interviews will be done before starting their second (new) activity, after 8 weeks of pursuing the new activity on their own, and after 6 weeks with OT support. These interviews will be video, and audio recorded and transcribed. This study examines 'real-life' experiences and participation outcomes of youth with physical disabilities after a participation-based capacity-building intervention.

Not yet recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Sarcopenia and Related Factors in Lipedema

LipedemaSarcopenia1 more

Lipedema is a common disease of subcutaneous adipose tissue. The most common complaint of patients with swelling in the affected extremity is pain. In addition, patients with lipedema may experience conditions that can greatly affect the health and quality of life of the individual, such as loss of muscle strength and exercise capacity, and deterioration in activity levels of daily living. It is still unknown whether the decrease in muscle strength in patients with lipedema is part of this condition or whether decreased activity levels lead to decreased muscle strength. Sarcopenia is an important health problem characterized by age-related loss of muscle mass and muscle function. The relationship between muscle weakness and sarcopenia in patients with lipedema has not been investigated before. Early recognition of possible sarcopenia and functional limitations in these patients may be important to increase the ability of patients to participate in physical activity as part of their conservative management. There is no study in the literature investigating sarcopenia in patients with a diagnosis of lipedema. The aim of this study is to evaluate patients with a diagnosis of lipedema in terms of sarcopenia. In addition, the relationship between sarcopenia and age, body mass index, exercise frequency, lipedema type, and stage will be investigated in patients diagnosed with lipedema.

Recruiting8 enrollment criteria

PiPT in ADSM With MSD

Chronic PainMusculoskeletal Diseases or Conditions

The study objective is to establish feasibility of implementing a psychologically informed rehabilitation strategy while concurrently assessing its' effectiveness in Active duty service members (ADSM) with musculoskeletal disorders (MSD) seeking care in a US Navy shore-based healthcare setting. This intervention is intended to improve the management of chronic pain in order to optimize ADSM function. The study team is proposing an observational prospective comparative cohort study. This study tests an implementation/strategy while observing/gathering information on the clinical intervention and related outcomes.

Recruiting10 enrollment criteria

Impacts of an Advanced Practice Physiotherapy Model of Care for Adults With a Peripheral Musculoskeletal...

Musculoskeletal Disorders

The goal of this prospective observational study is to evaluate advanced practice physiotherapy and orthopedic surgeon care and clinical outcomes for new patients with a peripheral musculoskeletal disorders consulting at the orthopedic outpatient clinic of the Hôpital Jean-Talon. The main questions it aims to answer are: 1. To describe the models of care at the Hôpital Jean-Talon orthopedic outpatient clinic; 2. To assess change in pain, disability, quality of life and pain catastrophizing at 6, 12 and 26 weeks after the initial evaluation; 3. To assess interprofessional collaboration between the advanced practice physiotherapists and orthopedic surgeons; 4. To assess patient satisfaction with care; 5. To assess waiting time before an initial consultation. Researchers will compare patients cared in the advanced practice physiotherapy and orthopedic surgeon group and the orthopedic surgeon only group.

Recruiting6 enrollment criteria

Pain Evaluation and Treatment in Clinical Settings

Chronic PainFunctional Limitations1 more

This new research projet in pain is enrolled into an international official collaboration between researchers and clinicians from Irmandade da Santa Casa de Londrina (ISCAL) and those from two Quebec universities: University of Quebec in Chicoutimi (UQAC) and University of Quebec in Rimouski (UQAR). ISCAL as a living laboratory research environment (sites, equipment, technology) for researchers, clinicians, students, and patients pool will make this project unique in the world, especially to stablish an integral concept on pain from identification, assessment and management, using neurophysiological central measures across patients with neuromusculoskeletal disorders. ISCAL in partnership with Santa Hospital in Londrina admit so many patients per day suffering of pain, by supporting a specific size of sample for establishment of this integral concept in pain. This project builds on the foundations already well installed at ISCAL for data acquisition and storage, from an ideal set-up including patients with pain and clinicians. ISCAL infrastructure will be used to improve the acquirement of pain data from patients, using high-tech tools in a simple and robust experimental protocol targeting the central nervous system (CNS). Pain conventional evaluation (by questionnaires or simple questions related to pain intensity from anamneses or inspection doctor) will be completed by neurophysiological measures of the CNS activity based on the acquisition of biological signals and related to functional activities of the patients. A specific physiological behavior of pain will be determinate, using different types of preprocessing and statistical analyzes on biological signals. While pain and physical dysfunction mechanisms involve through the CNS, measurements from the CNS will allow to better understand the profiles and needs of the population (active adults and older people) suffering from pain and disabilities. The knowledge acquired throughout this research program will improve the pain care in Santa Casa Hospital, the evidence-based practices (EBP) on site by specialist doctors and health professionals (nursing, medical, physiatry, physiotherapist etc.), and mainly will improve the quality of life of patients with pain. This project is a sharing of expertise beneficial to both poles, including the training of students, the use of advanced technologies and the exploration of new avenues in pain research grounded on the development of ISCAL in an international collaboration perspective. All of the work from this research program aims to make ISCAL the reference center for chronic pain in Paraná (south of country) and further, for all Brazil.

Not yet recruiting15 enrollment criteria

Feasibility and Acceptability of Collaborative Care for People With Musculoskeletal and Mental Problems...

Mental DisorderMusculoskeletal Diseases

This study aims to implement a feasibility Randomised Controlled Trial to support patients with musculoskeletal problems and a co-existing mental condition, which the intervention will be the implementation of a Collaborative Care Model. In England, one in six adults suffers from a mental health condition, such as anxiety or depression. Despite these high numbers, mental health conditions are often unrecognised in physical healthcare settings, including patients with musculoskeletal (MSK) conditions. Patients with both a physical and mental health diagnosis are likely more difficult to treat in comparison to those with just a physical health condition. The Collaborative Care Model offers an alternative way of improving musculoskeletal rehabilitation as it takes into consideration both physical and mental health needs. This model involves physical and mental healthcare professionals working together to better identify and manage people with both conditions. Patients are then further supported by a Case Manager who coordinates access to relevant professionals/services following an assessment of both physical and mental health needs. The investigators propose a feasibility study to assess whether the collaborative care model is beneficial to orthopaedic patients in addressing both physical and mental health needs. Patients over 18 years old, with an MSK condition attending therapy services at the Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital with a moderate to severe anxiety or depression score, may be eligible. Following informed consent, they will be randomly allocated to either treatment as usual or the intervention group (the collaborative care model with input from a Case Manager). All participants will participate for 6 months with a follow-up on months 3 and 6.

Recruiting12 enrollment criteria

"Shoulder Musculoskeletal Disorders in Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus: Contributing Factors and Rehabilitation...

Diabetes MellitusType 22 more

Goals: to compare the effects of two distinct rehabilitation protocols (conventional shoulder musculoskeletal rehabilitation combined with aerobic exercises versus solely conventional shoulder musculoskeletal rehabilitation) on shoulder pain, function, strength, kinematics and tendon thickness in patients with type 2 DM after 12 weeks of intervention and a subsequent follow up of 8 weeks. The secondary objective of this study will be to evaluate the association between AGEs accumulation and shoulder pain, function, strength, kinematics and tendon thickness in individuals with type 2 DM. Methodology: is a single-blinded randomized controlled trial, in which all subjects with a clinical diagnosis of type 2 DM (with at least 1 year of diagnosis), of both sexes, between 40 and 70 years, presenting shoulder pain (uni or bilateral) for at least 3 months with a pain intensity score from 3 points on a numerical rating scale for pain intensity, will be invited to participate. The main outcomes of this study will include the AGEs accumulation through skin autofluorescence measurement; shoulder pain through NRS scales; shoulder function through SPADI questionnaire and range of motion measurement; isometric shoulder muscles strength through manual muscle dynamometer measurement; shoulder kinematics through three dimensional inertial units measurements; supraspinatus tendon thickness through ultrasound measurement. All these outcomes will be measured before and after the rehabilitation protocols. Participants will be randomly assigned to one of the two rehabilitation groups: specific shoulder rehabilitation protocol group (SRG); or 2) specific protocol of shoulder rehabilitation plus aerobic exercise group (ARG). All individuals will be evaluated before starting the rehabilitation protocol (baseline) and at the end of rehabilitation (post 12 weeks) and 8 weeks after the end of the rehabilitation (follow up). For the statistical analysis, to verify the effectiveness of protocols over time, a variance analysis (ANOVA) of mixed model with Bonferroni adjustment will be performed for pairwise comparisons. Variables that do not meet the ANOVA assumptions will be analyzed by the Mann-Whitney and Wilcoxon tests with Bonferroni correction a priori. In order to assess the secondary objective of the study, correlation tests depending on data distribution will be performed (Pearson or Spearman correlation tests). A simple linear regression analysis will also be performed in order to analyze how much the AGEs accumulation can explain the alterations in the musculoskeletal and biomechanical variables. The significance level will be set at 5%.

Not yet recruiting2 enrollment criteria

Prospective SPINE Registry

Sacroiliac; FusionSacroiliac9 more

This study is a prospective, multi-center, open label registry designed to collect real-world data on performance and safety data on RTI's spine products.

Recruiting5 enrollment criteria

SWORD Health Patient Registry

Musculoskeletal Diseases

The purpose of this study is to create a research repository, comprised of data collected in the course of physical rehabilitation programs for musculoskeletal disorders (MSDs) using the medical device SWORD Phoenix®. This will allow the company to ascertain the acceptance, engagement and effectiveness of programs using this asynchronous tele-rehabilitation platform in the treatment of multiple MSDs.

Recruiting4 enrollment criteria

Downstream Effects of Personalized 'Top-down' Participation-based Interventions Among Youth With...

Spinal Cord InjuriesSpina Bifida4 more

Participation in community-based activities is essential to the health and well-being of youth with physical disabilities; yet, it is extremely restricted. Emerging treatment approaches aimed at improving participation have shifted from focusing only on impaired body functions towards the performance of functional meaningful activities within the youth's natural environment. Investigators' initial results from studies in Quebec show that targeting intervention at the activity/participation level can result in improvement of impaired body functions (e.g., balance, attention, anxiety) - important components to address in rehabilitation. Investigators' team aims to continue studying the impact of participation by launching a larger more rigorous study. Investigators have partnered with major organizations providing rehabilitation services for youth as well as key community-based stakeholders including youth, clinicians, and managers, and together investigators plan to further examine whether engaging in an 8-week community-based activity individually chosen by the youth (e.g., sledge hockey, drawing, playing a musical instrument) can lead to a significant improvement in three key body functions: motor, behavioral and emotional. One hundred and fifty youth with physical disabilities living in Quebec and Ontario will participate and engage in an activity of choice. Changes in their body functions (e.g., movement, attention, mood) will be measured multiple times before, during and after engagement in the chosen activity. Findings of this study can guide clinicians, families and policy-makers to select effective approaches that not only promote participation but also facilitate additional motor and mental benefits from a single intervention. Such 'real-world' treatment approaches involving activities of choice can also increase motivation, compliance and reduce burden on the healthcare system and on the youth and families.

Not yet recruiting8 enrollment criteria
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