one publication added to basket [253600] | Manual and manipulative therapy in addition to rehabilitation for osteoarthritis of the knee: assessor-blind randomized pilot trial
Dwyer, L.; Parkin-Smith, G.F.; Brantingham, J.W.; Korporaal, C.; Cassa, T.K.; Globe, G.; Bonnefin, D.; Tong, V. (2015). Manual and manipulative therapy in addition to rehabilitation for osteoarthritis of the knee: assessor-blind randomized pilot trial. J. Manipulative Physiol. Ther. 38(1): 1-21. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jmpt.2014.10.002
In: Journal of Manipulative and Physiological Therapeutics. Elsevier: New York. ISSN 0161-4754; e-ISSN 1532-6586, more
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Author keywords |
Pilot Projects; Osteoarthritis; Knee; Musculoskeletal Manipulations; Rehabilitation |
Authors | | Top |
- Dwyer, L.
- Parkin-Smith, G.F.
- Brantingham, J.W.
- Korporaal, C.
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- Cassa, T.K.
- Globe, G.
- Bonnefin, D.
- Tong, V.
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Abstract |
ObjectivesThe purpose of this study was to examine the methodological integrity, sample size requirements, and short-term preliminary clinical outcomes of manual and manipulative therapy (MMT) in addition to a rehabilitation program for symptomatic knee osteoarthritis (OA).MethodsThis was a pilot study of an assessor-blinded, randomized, parallel-group trial in 2 independent university-based outpatient clinics. Participants with knee OA were randomized to 3 groups: 6 MMT sessions alone, training in rehabilitation followed by a home rehabilitation program alone, or MMT plus the same rehabilitation program, respectively. Six MMT treatment sessions (provided by a chiropractic intern under supervision or by an experienced chiropractor) were provided to participants over the 4-week treatment period. The primary outcome was a description of the research methodology and sample size estimation for a confirmatory study. The secondary outcome was the short-term preliminary clinical outcomes. Data were collected at baseline and 5 weeks using the Western Ontario and McMasters Osteoarthritis Index questionnaire, goniometry for knee flexion/extension, and the McMaster Overall Therapy Effectiveness inventory. Analysis of variance was used to compare differences between groups.ResultsEighty-three patients were randomly allocated to 1 of the 3 groups (27, 28, and 28, respectively). Despite 5 dropouts, the data from 78 participants were available for analysis with 10% of scores missing. A minimum of 462 patients is required for a confirmatory 3-arm trial including the respective interventions, accounting for cluster effects and a 20% dropout rate. Statistically significant and clinically meaningful changes in scores from baseline to week 5 were found for all groups for the Western Ontario and McMasters Osteoarthritis Index (P = .008), with a greater change in scores for MMT and MMT plus rehabilitation. Between-group comparison did not reveal statistically significant differences between group scores at week 5 for any of the outcome measures (P = .46).ConclusionsThis pilot trial suggests that a confirmatory trial is feasible. There were significant changes in scores from baseline to week 5 across all groups, suggesting that all 3 treatment approaches may be of benefit to patients with mild-to-moderate knee OA, justifying a confirmatory trial to compare these interventions. |
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