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Active clinical trials for "Osteoarthritis, Knee"

Results 2401-2410 of 2600

Personalised HTO Versus Generic HTO Virtual Clinical Trial

OsteoarthritisKnee

High Tibial Osteotomy (HTO) is an alternative to knee replacement in suitable patients with early knee osteoarthritis (OA), it is particularly suited to patients with single compart disease who otherwise would be suitable for unicompartmental knee replacement (UKR). OA of the knee is very common and increasing driven by the ageing of the population. The current limitations of HTO are related to the difficulty of achieving the desired correction due to a challenging surgical technique and soft tissue irritation due to the use of generic stabilisation plates. This study will examine the safety equivalence of a new patient specific HTO process which has patient specific 3D printed plates, i.e. personalised HTO plates, with the existing most commonly used HTO procedure using the Tomofix generic HTO plate. Importantly this study will be undertaken as a Virtual Trial, existing anonymised 3D imaging data will be used to create the virtual patient cohort. This cohort will receive both procedures, which for this type of procedure is only possible in a virtual scenario. The main question to be addressed is: "Is the personalised HTO procedure as safe as the most commonly used existing generic HTO procedure?". In this context safety concerns the mechanical loads placed upon the tibia and the support plate. The interventions will all be made on computer models, the 3D imaging data will be used to create the intact (un-operated) models of the subject tibias. Each model will then be virtually operated upon, with both the personalised and generic HTO procedures. The models will then be loaded with physiological loads experienced during function and the mechanical states compared.

Completed6 enrollment criteria

Comprehensive Knee Osteoarthritis Index (CKOAI): Scale Development, Validation and Reliability Testing...

Osteo Arthritis Knee

Background: Symptoms, balance, mobility, activities of daily life (ADL) and quality of life (QoL) are to be considered in rehabilitation of the individuals with knee osteoarthritis (IKOA). There are several scales to evaluate subjective perceptions and individual components in patients with osteoarthritis (OA). Till date, no scale is available to measure the combined balance, mobility, ADL and QoL in PKOA. Objectives: The objectives of the study are to develop a combined measure of symptoms, balance, mobility, ADL and QoL in PKOA, as comprehensive knee osteoarthritis index (CKOAI) and to validate the scale for its content, reliability and minimum detectable change (MDC) Methods: The study consists of a three stages. First stage is the scale (CKOI) item development and validation. This includes domain and item generating through systematic literature search to extract items related symptoms, balance, mobility, ADL and QoL in IKOA based on the International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health (ICF) and through structured interviews. During scale validation, an expert panel will review the generated domains and items by Delphi Method, which will undergo revision and pilot testing. Based on the responsiveness of pilot testing will be revised finally. Second stage is to test re-test reliability. The third stage is to report the standard error of measurement (SEM) and minimal detectable change (MDC). Data analysis: All the domains and items in CKOAI will undergo reliability and criterion-related validity. Minimum 50 IKOA will be evaluated with the scale on two occasions within two weeks to establish test retest reliability. Cronbach's alpha for internal consistency and Intra class correlation coefficient for test retest reliability will be used to determine the degree of consistency of items in the scale. MDC will be calculated using the formulae, SEM = SD x √ (1-reliability) and MDC95 = √2 x (1.9) x (SEM). Significant level will be set at p value less than 0.05 (p < 0.05) to minimize the type-I error.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Prospective Observational Study of Pain Evolution in Patients With Primary Knee Osteoarthritis Treated...

Osteo Arthritis Knee

Prospective observational study of 6 months of follow-up, of national and multicenter scope with medical device with CE marking and according to the usual clinical practice. In addition, due to the observational design of the clinical investigation, no assignment of the patients will be made to any specific study group, but will be carried out in accordance with the usual clinical practice, not applying any intervention other than the usual one in this type of care practice and always in accordance with current clinical guidelines and recommendations and with the indications authorized in Spain. Patients will be recruited by specialists and will be followed for 6 months under the conditions of usual clinical practice.

Completed19 enrollment criteria

Feasibility of CPET in Patients Prior to TKA

OsteoarthritisKnee

Higher aerobic capacity before surgery, as indicated during submaximal exercise testing by the oxygen uptake (VO2) at the ventilatory anaerobic threshold (VAT), is assumed to be prognostic for a better and faster postoperative recovery in patients with knee osteoarthritis (OA) undergoing total knee arthroplasty (TKA). Cardiopulmonary exercise testing (CPET) is the gold standard to measure aerobic capacity; however, it is unclear whether it is feasible to perform CPET using cycle ergometry in patients with knee OA prior to TKA surgery. The hypothesis is that performing CPET is feasible and participants will meet the feasibility criteria for success. The primary objective of this cross-sectional feasibility study is to investigate the feasibility of CPET in patients with knee OA three to six weeks prior to TKA surgery in three domains: a) recruitment rate of participants who are representative of the target study population; b) reaching the VAT during CPET; and c) acceptability and suitability. The secondary objective is to investigate aerobic capacity of the study population and to compare values with normative values. The study population consists of patients with knee OA scheduled for primary unilateral TKA surgery. Feasibility of CPET will be assessed against five criteria: 1) recruitment rate ≥20%; 2) CPET performance rate ≥90%; 3) ≥90% of participants reached the VAT; 4) no serious adverse events; and 5) ≥80% of participants had a positive attitude towards CPET. Aerobic capacity is determined by the VO2 at the VAT and the oxygen uptake efficiency slope (OUES). CPET is considered a safe procedure. Participants perform the CPET instead of a walking test following the standard preoperative screening and complete a questionnaire to examine their experiences. The investigator will contact the participants one week after the CPET to inquire whether they have developed any complaints afterwards. Benefit from participation is that all patients objectively get insight in their preoperative aerobic capacity.

Completed11 enrollment criteria

Population Pharmacokinetics of Ropivacaine

Knee Osteoarthritis

The aim of this study was to investigate the pharmacokinetics of free and total ropivacaine after unilateral and bilateral TKA. A population model was successfully built and peak free ropivacaine concentration stayed below previously proposed toxic thresholds in patients undergoing unilateral as well as bilateral TKA receiving LIA with high dose ropivacaine.

Completed2 enrollment criteria

Dual-task Gait Performance in People With Knee Osteoarthritis Before and After Knee Replacement...

OsteoarthritisKnee

Knee Osteoarthritis (OA) is one of the most common conditions causing disability and limitation in the elderly population, with 13% of women and 10% of men over the age of 60 suffering from symptomatic knee osteoarthritis. Pain and other symptoms of OA significantly affect the quality of life, manifesting itself in pain, decreased range of motion, functional limitation and change in gait patterns. Total Knee Replacement Surgery (TKR) is the most common solution for patients with advanced cartilage erosion and is considered a successful surgery with high satisfaction rates (about 80%). The surgery becomes necessary when pain limits the daily functioning and impairs the quality of life and after the failure of conservative treatment. Still, patients undergoing TKR suffer in the first period after surgery from pain, decreased balance and proprioceptive impairment. Despite the improvement in pain and function, the rates of falls after surgery do not change drastically and remain high. About a third of older adults fall each year, leading to fractures, functional decline and in some cases death. Walking is a complex task, and with advancing age walking becomes less automatic and requires additional attention. Among adults, it is known that an increased risk of falls is associated with reduced ability to perform complex walking tasks, such as walking while talking or crossing obstacles. After TKR, most falls occur while walking due to slipping / tripping. In addition, proprioceptive impairment, pain and poor balance are associated with an increased risk of falling after TKR. The mechanism underlying these effects may be increased allocation of cognitive resources to walking. Thus, this study will examine the ability of people before and after TKR to perform complex walking tasks, in order to examine the change in attention allocation to walking following surgery. It is hypothesized that after surgery, the ability to walk while performing an additional task will be lower than prior to surgery.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Predictive Values for the Outcome of Genicular Nerve Radiofrequency Ablation for Chronic Knee Pain...

OsteoarthritisKnee

Researchers are trying to assess a predictive value or correlation between patient and procedural characteristics and outcome measures results after genicular nerve radiofrequency ablation.

Completed5 enrollment criteria

Adaptation and Validation of the Exercise Adherence Rating Scale of Knee Osteoarthritis Patients...

Knee Osteoarthritis

The origin of knee osteoarthritis is multifactorial but the disease is strongly related to age. The pain and functional disability are the main reasons for consultation. Non-pharmaceutical treatment is always indicated. The rehabilitation will reduce the pain, maintain or partially recover the amplitude of the movements as well as fight against vicious analgesic attitudes and strengthen the muscles to stabilize the joints. A program of self-rehabilitation exercises performed at home may be prescribed to people with knee osteoarthritis. It must include exercises adapted to the patient's functional abilities and painful level and requires education to improve the patient's motivation to practice a regular exercise program. However, adherence to such exercises is low, and until 2016 there was no objective way to find out the reasons for patients' lack of adherence to self-workout programs. The EARS ("Exercise Adherence Rating Scale" or Adhesion to Physical Exercise Programs) is validated in 2016 and reliable to evaluate the physical activity of patients with low back pain. As far as we know, this questionnaire is the only one validated in the international literature, a validation for French patients is currently underway. We believe this tool can be used for patients with knee osteoarthritis after minor changes.

Completed9 enrollment criteria

Femoral Cartilage Thickness In Patients With Lower Limb Amputation

AmputationOsteo Arthritis Knee

The aim of the study to investigate any relation with functional parameters and femoral cartilage thickness evaluation by ultrasonography in lower extremity amputate individuals.

Completed12 enrollment criteria

Change in Patient Reported Outcomes and Wish for Joint Surgery

OsteoarthritisKnee and Hip

Aim To investigate associations between within-person change in patient reported outcomes (PROMs) and wish for joint surgery during up to 12-month participation in a digital first-line intervention for knee and hip osteoarthritis (OA) comprising exercise and education. Methods Retrospective observational registry data. All participants enrolling between June 1st 2018 and September 30th 2021 with follow-up data and with a change in their wish for surgery (dichotomous, becoming wishing or unwishing) were included. Analysed PROMS comprised pain (numeric rating scale (NRS), 0-10), 5 level EuroQol - 5-dimension (EQ5D-5L, 0.243-0.976), overall health (NRS, 0-10), activity impairment (NRS, 0-10), walking difficulties (yes/no), fear of movement (yes/no), function and quality of life subscales of Knee/Hip injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score 12 Items (KOOS-12/HOOS-12, both 0-100). To capture effects of changes in PROMs over time on probability of wish for surgery, the investigators used fixed effect (conditional) logistic regressions.

Completed5 enrollment criteria
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