Tregocel® as a Dietary Supplement in Mild Knee Osteoarthritis
Mild Knee OsteoarthritisThis study is an assessment of the overall performance of participants with symptomatic mild knee OA taking Tregocel® as a dietary supplement in addition to standard of care treatment.
Biologic Mechanisms for Pain Variation After Physical Activity in Osteoarthritis
OsteoarthritisKnee3 moreOsteoarthritis (OA) in the knee is characterized by chronic inflammatory pain that is not necessarily related to the amount of joint damage. Clinical practice guidelines recommend physical activity (PA) for osteoarthritis pain, but most adults with OA do not engage in PA. One reason for this is that while PA can reduce OA related joint pain, it does not work for everyone. PA decreases pain sensitivity for about half of adults with OA but increases pain sensitivity for the other half. The investigators are hypothesizing that individual differences in how well cells work to make energy, inflammation, and different proteins available in blood cells explains who PA will work to reduce pain and who it won't among adults with OA. The purpose of this pilot study is to determine if blood cells' ability to make cellular energy, inflammation and proteins help explain the difference about who PA reduces activity for and who it doesn't. The investigators will compare these biologic factors and pain sensitivity before walking, immediately after 30 minutes of walking (i.e. "acute") and after six weeks of walking three times a week for 30 minutes (i.e. "long-term") in adults with hip or knee osteoarthritis. The investigators will also compare these results to adults without OA. The investigators will recruit a sample of 40 adults with radiologic (e.g x-ray or CT scan) evidence of hip or knee OA and 20 age/gender matched healthy adults without OA to address the following study aims: Aim 1: To examine the effects of a six week (three days/week) walking program on pain in adults with OA as compared to healthy controls. Aim 2: To test the cells' ability to make energy as a mechanism for variation in pain after "acute" and "long-term" PA in older adults with lower extremity osteoarthritis. Aim3: To test the role of inflammation as a mechanism for variation in pain after "acute" and "long-term" physical activity in adults with lower extremity osteoarthritis. Aim 4: To generate hypotheses regarding the role of proteomics in variation in pain after "acute" and "long-term" physical activity.
Digital Motivation to Decrease Inactive Behaviour in Patients With Knee Osteoarthritis
Knee OsteoarthritisPhysical inactivity is a major risk behaviour with a potential for causing premature death, particularly among people with mobility limitations, such as knee osteoarthritis. Digital motivational interventions (such as SMS) can motive to a healthy behaviour including increased physical activity. The purpose of this study is to investigate if motivational text messages following an exercise intervention to improve mobility limitations will change the physical activity level in patients with knee osteoarthritis. This study is designed as pilot randomized controlled trial, with equal randomization (1:1). Eligible participants will be randomised into one of two groups (intervention or control) after completing their baseline measurements. The intervention group will receive weekly motivational text messages and the control group will not receive any attention from the study.
Inflammation Impact on Pain in Knee Osteoarthritis
InflammationOsteo Arthritis KneeThe aim of this study is to use gold particles as a model compound to modulate specifically and selectively the function of macrophages and mast cells and investigate how this modulates pain and pain sensitization in the osteoarthritic knee assessed by mechanistic pain assessment technologies
Cartilage Adaptation and Response to Interleukins and Exercise
Osteo Arthritis KneeThis study will examine the effect of exercise on the turnover of collagen in articular cartilage and the content of cytokines in the synovial fluid from human adults with osteoarthritis.
Changes in Cytokine Levels After Dextrose Injection in Stage IV Knee Osteoarthritis
OsteoarthritisKneeTwenty participants with severe arthritis will be enrolled. For the first week participants will either be injected with dextrose or just have fluid withdrawn for testing. The remaining participants will be given dextrose injection at the end of the week. After one week dextrose injections will be given at one, two, three, four, five, and six months. Fluid will be withdrawn from the knee at time zero, one week, and three months. The hypothesis is that dextrose injection will cause a change in proteins in the knee consistent with improved repair signals, along with improving knee pain and function. .
Independent Weight Loss Maintenance for Communities With Arthritis in North Carolina: the I-CAN...
Osteo Arthritis KneeThe study team is currently conducting a pragmatic, community-based assessor-blinded randomized controlled trial (RCT) in overweight and obese adults > 50 years with knee OA in both urban and rural counties in North Carolina. As the participants randomized to the 18 month diet and exercise group in the WE-CAN study successfully complete the intervention (≥ 5% weight loss), the study team has the unique opportunity to evaluate the effectiveness of a theoretically-based tapered weight maintenance intervention. Eligible participants will be randomized to either the weight-loss maintenance or health education attention control groups.
Improving Resilience and Longevity for Workers Through Exercise
OsteoarthritisKnee2 moreThe purpose of this study is to examine the impact of an OA-specific aerobic and strengthening exercise program, delivered within the workplace, on mobility, pain, physical capacity, and resilience among workers with knee or hip OA as well as those with no joint pain. The investigators hypothesize that exercise designed for OA, delivered at work, will improve all of these outcomes.
Internal Compartment Knee Osteoarthritis: ODRA (Orthosis Distraction and Rotation for osteoArthritis)...
Knee OsteoarthritisThis is a biomedical study on a medical device. 120 patients will participate in this study and will be split into 2 groups: 60 patients in the "usual care" group: these patients will receive the usual care proposed by their doctor for 12 months. 60 patients in the "ODRA" group: these patients will wear the ODRA brace for 12 months in addition to their usual care. They will be instructed to wear the brace for at least 6 hours per day, 5 days per week and to take it off during rest periods when lying down. The distribution of patients in the groups will be randomized. For this study, patients will be followed for 12 months, spread over 3 visits: inclusion visit, follow-up visit at 6 months and 12 months.
Transdermal Delivery of Glucosamine to the Synovial Fluid of Male and Female With Knee Osteoarthritis...
OsteoarthritisKneeGlucosamine is commonly used as a treatment for Osteoarthritis (OA). While oral administration remains the most commonly used route, topical administration could offer numerous advantages such as targeted delivery to affected joints and overcoming the negative effects of the passage of the drug through the digestive system. The objective of this study is to assess the bioavailability of glucosamine in the synovial fluid of osteoarthritic joints, following the topical application of a commercially available transdermal glucosamine cream. Joint fluid samples will be collected from 2 groups of participants with knee OA: the Control group will not be subjected to any treatment while the Test group will apply 2g of transdermal glucosamine cream 1 to 3 hours before the joint fluid collection. Glucosamine concentration will be determined and the results obtained from both groups will be compared. This trial will potentially provide data to support that glucosamine can cross the skin and be delivered to the affected joint fluid when formulated in a transdermal cream base.