scholarly journals A randomized controlled study for the comparison of efficacy and safety assessment of intra-articular injection of high molecular weight hyaluronic acid and oral non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs for Japanese patients with knee osteoarthritis (UMIN000001026)

2012 ◽  
Vol 20 ◽  
pp. S287
Author(s):  
M. Ishijima ◽  
T. Nakamura ◽  
K. Shimizu ◽  
K. Hayashi ◽  
K. Kaneko
2019 ◽  
Vol 27 ◽  
pp. S503-S504
Author(s):  
C. Hummer ◽  
F. Angst ◽  
E. Schemitsch ◽  
C. Whittington ◽  
C. Manitt ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammad Hasan Bahrami ◽  
Seyed Ahmad Raeissadat ◽  
Mohsen Cheraghi ◽  
Shahram Rahimi-Dehgolan ◽  
Adel Ebrahimpour

2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Adel Ebrahimpour ◽  
Mohammad Hasan Bahrami ◽  
Seyed Ahmad Raeissadat ◽  
Mohsen Cheraghi ◽  
Shahram Rahimi-Dehgolan

Abstract Purpose To compare intra-articular (IA) knee injections of a cross-linked high-molecular-weight hyaluronic acid (HMW-HA) with a linear low-molecular weight HA (LMW-HA) in terms of pain and functional improvement among knee osteoarthritis (OA) patients.Methods In this single-blinded RCT, the patients were randomly divided into two groups for HA injections. The first group received an HMW-HA (Arthromac) injection, while the other received three weekly LMW-HA (Hyalgan) injections. Pain and function were assessed using the outcome measures including WOMAC, Lequesne and VAS indices, once prior to injection, as well as 2 and 6 months after injections.Results A total of 90 patients were included. There was no significant difference in baseline characteristics including age and sex between the two groups. Our analysis showed that total WOMAC, Lequesne and VAS mean scores remarkably improved at both follow-up time-points compared to the baseline measurements (p<0.001). There was no significant superiority between the two therapeutic protocols according to our outcome measures at any time-point of follow-up. The only except was about the improvement in WOMAC stiffness subscale that was significantly higher in LMW-HA group compared to HMW-HA (p=0.021). Moreover, no significant difference was observed in minor complications and injection-induced pain scores between the two groups.Conclusion This study proved that a single HMW-HA injection is as effective as multiple injections of LMW-HA counterparts in periods of 2 and 6 months follow-up.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohammad Hasan Bahrami ◽  
Seyed Ahmad Raeissadat ◽  
Mohsen Cheraghi ◽  
Shahram Rahimi-Dehgolan ◽  
Adel Ebrahimpour

Abstract Purpose To compare intra-articular (IA) knee injections of a cross-linked high-molecular-weight hyaluronic acid (HMW-HA) with a linear low-molecular weight HA (LMW-HA) in terms of pain and functional improvement among knee osteoarthritis (OA) patients. Methods In this single-blinded RCT, the patients were randomly divided into two groups for HA injections. The first group received an HMW-HA (Arthromac) injection, while the other received three weekly LMW-HA (Hyalgan) injections. Pain and function were assessed using the outcome measures including WOMAC, Lequesne and VAS indices, once prior to injection, as well as 2 and 6 months after injections. Results A total of 90 patients were included. There was no significant difference in baseline characteristics including age and sex between the two groups. Our analysis showed that total WOMAC, Lequesne and VAS mean scores remarkably improved at both follow-up time-points compared to the baseline measurements (p<0.001). There was no significant superiority between the two therapeutic protocols according to our outcome measures at any time-point of follow-up. The only except was about the improvement in WOMAC stiffness subscale that was significantly higher in LMW-HA group compared to HMW-HA (p=0.021). Moreover, no significant difference was observed in minor complications and injection-induced pain scores between the two groups. Conclusion This study proved that a single HMW-HA injection is as effective as multiple injections of LMW-HA counterparts in periods of 2 and 6 months follow-up.


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