Patient undergoing personalized gait retraining for knee osteoarthritis in a Stanford lab
Patient undergoing personalized gait retraining for knee osteoarthritis in a Stanford lab
AI 生成的图像

Personalized foot-angle gait retraining reduced medial knee osteoarthritis pain in sham-controlled trial

AI 生成的图像
事实核查

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.

Adults with symptomatic medial compartment knee osteoarthritis took part in a single-center, parallel-group randomized controlled trial conducted at Stanford University.

Participants were assigned either to an intervention that modified their foot progression angle (walking with a slight toe-in or toe-out) or to a sham program that targeted each person’s natural foot progression angle. During six gait-laboratory retraining visits, both groups received real-time biofeedback aimed at keeping their steps near the assigned target angle.

For those in the intervention arm, investigators selected a 5° or 10° toe-in or toe-out change—based on gait testing—to maximize reduction in a biomechanical loading measure used in osteoarthritis research. After one year, the intervention group showed a larger reduction in medial knee pain than the sham group.

On MRI, the trial reported less deterioration in a quantitative cartilage measure (T1ρ) in the medial compartment for the intervention group compared with the sham group; the study did not find a significant between-group difference for another MRI parameter (T2). No severe adverse events were reported, though a small number of participants in each group withdrew because of increased knee pain.

Researchers and the University of Utah team behind the report cautioned that the approach is not a simple universal instruction to “toe in” or “toe out,” because the benefit depended on individualized measurement and selecting the direction and magnitude that reduced knee loading for a given person.

相关文章

Doctor explaining no-benefit results of meniscus surgery trial to concerned patient in clinic with charts and MRI visible.
AI 生成的图像

Finnish 10-year trial finds partial meniscectomy offers no benefit over sham surgery for degenerative meniscus tears

由 AI 报道 AI 生成的图像 事实核查

A 10-year follow-up of the Finnish Degenerative Meniscal Lesion Study (FIDELITY) found that arthroscopic partial meniscectomy did not improve symptoms or knee function compared with placebo surgery, and patients assigned to the procedure tended to have worse long-term outcomes.

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.

由 AI 报道 事实核查

An umbrella review and pooled analysis published in BMJ’s open-access journal RMD Open concludes that exercise therapy—widely promoted as a first-line treatment for osteoarthritis—delivers, at most, small and short-term improvements in pain and function compared with placebo or no treatment, with benefits appearing smaller in larger and longer-term trials.

A study published in the journal *Bone Research* reports that parathyroid hormone (PTH) reduced pain-related behaviors in mouse models of spinal degeneration, apparently by strengthening vertebral endplates and triggering bone-cell signals that repel pain-sensing nerve fibers. The work was led by Dr. Janet L. Crane of Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.

由 AI 报道

A new study reveals that after a stroke, the undamaged side of the brain can appear biologically younger as it compensates for lost function. Researchers analyzed MRI scans from over 500 stroke survivors worldwide using AI models. The findings suggest neuroplasticity helps explain persistent motor impairments.

此网站使用 cookie

我们使用 cookie 进行分析以改进我们的网站。阅读我们的 隐私政策 以获取更多信息。
拒绝