Aerobic exercise best for knee osteoarthritis pain relief

A major review of 217 clinical trials has identified aerobic exercises like walking, cycling and swimming as the most effective for reducing pain and improving function in knee osteoarthritis. The study, published in The BMJ, recommends these activities as the first-line intervention. Other exercises provide benefits but work best alongside aerobics.

Researchers analyzed 217 randomized trials from 1990 to 2024, involving 15,684 participants with knee osteoarthritis. The review compared aerobic, flexibility, strengthening, mind-body, neuromotor and mixed exercise programs against controls. Using the GRADE system, they assessed evidence quality across short-term (four weeks), mid-term (12 weeks) and long-term (24 weeks) outcomes, focusing on pain, physical function, gait and quality of life. Aerobic exercise consistently ranked highest, with moderate-certainty evidence showing pain reduction in short and mid-term, plus improvements in function, walking ability and quality of life during those periods. Strengthening and mixed programs aided mid-term function, while mind-body and neuromotor exercises helped short-term outcomes. No exercise type increased adverse events compared to controls, confirming safety. The findings address gaps in guidelines, as knee osteoarthritis affects nearly 30% of adults over 45 on x-rays, with half experiencing severe symptoms from cartilage breakdown. Researchers recommend aerobic exercise 'as a first line intervention for knee osteoarthritis management, particularly when the aim is to improve functional capacity and reduce pain.' If unsuitable, 'alternative forms of structured physical activity may still be beneficial.' Limitations include indirect comparisons and limited long-term data for some outcomes.

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Patient undergoing personalized gait retraining for knee osteoarthritis in a Stanford lab
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Personalized foot-angle gait retraining reduced medial knee osteoarthritis pain in sham-controlled trial

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In a randomized, sham-controlled trial, adults with mild-to-moderate medial compartment knee osteoarthritis who were retrained to walk with a personalized, small change in foot progression angle reported greater pain improvement after one year than those given sham retraining. The study, conducted at Stanford University and published in The Lancet Rheumatology, also found a smaller MRI-based worsening of a cartilage microstructure measure in the intervention group.

A minimally invasive procedure known as genicular artery embolization (GAE) was linked to sustained pain reduction and improved function for most people with osteoarthritis-related knee pain in a prospective, single-center study using rapidly resorbable gelatin-based microspheres, with follow-up reported out to 12 months.

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Specialists state that physical exercise must be mandatory in cancer treatment, not optional. Evidence from studies highlights benefits like reduced cardiac toxicity and fatigue. The recommendation was emphasized at the Onco in Rio congress in Rio de Janeiro.

Adults with obesity who began taking GLP-1 receptor agonist medications showed declines in Fitbit-measured physical activity after starting treatment, according to a retrospective study presented Saturday at ENDO 2026, the Endocrine Society’s annual meeting in Chicago.

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