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NCT06647446
NA

Improvements in Function and Pain in the Rehabilitation of Patients with Knee Osteoarthritis Using an Exercise Program Telemonitored Compared to Conventional Treatment

Sponsor: University of Valencia

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Osteoarthritis is a very prevalent pathology after the fifth decade of life. It usually appears in the hip and hand, although its presence in the knee is even greater, with a prevalence in subjects over 45 years of age of 19% radiographically (radiographic findings without taking symptoms into account) and 7% in the symptomatic population, for those over 60 years of age, 37% radiographic and 12% symptomatic and finally, for those over 75 years of age there was 50% of osteoarthritis of the knee diagnosed by radiographs and 33% were symptomatic. There are gender differences: the lifetime risk of suffering knee osteoarthritis is estimated at 40% for men and 47% for women. Furthermore, the impact of this pathology is significant, being the most frequent cause of gait-related disability in adults in the United States. Different approaches have been proposed for the treatment of knee osteoarthritis. Currently, clinical practice guidelines place therapeutic exercise and education as the first line of treatment, reserving joint replacement surgery in case of failure of conservative treatment and only if there is severe disability. In recent years, due to the pandemic, there has been an accelerated development of telemedicine and telerehabilitation in all its aspects. Applications and websites have been developed for online rehabilitation. An example of this is TRAK, a telerehabilitation web tool that allows the creation of a profile for each patient and the design of personalized exercise programs and the periodization of the sessions to be carried out. During the execution of the exercises, the screen of the split phone will appear, displaying on one side the execution of the exercise by a model and on the other side, the patient sees himself performing the exercise. This tool allows the monitoring of the therapeutic exercise without the need to go to a consultation or to be in front of a physiotherapist, reducing the economic and time investment. Thus, the present work tries to compare the treatment with exercises monitored by means of the TRAK application with the performance of the same exercises, without the help of this tool.

Key Details

Gender

All

Age Range

45 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

50

Start Date

2024-10-30

Completion Date

2025-12

Last Updated

2024-10-21

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

OTHER

Exercise supported by the digital physiotherapy and telerehabilitation software TRAK

8 week home therapeutic exercise program that includes flexibility and strength exercises scheduled through the software of digital physiotherapy and telerehabilitation TRAK. The program will be carried out with a frequency of 3 weekly sessions, preferably on alternate days. The program will be carried out with the support of the TRAK software (https://www.trakphysio.com/es/), which allows the exercises to be carried out in front of a camera that, with the help of an artificial intelligence system, offers feedback to the participant and allows you to keep a record of the sessions. As an addition to the home sessions, two face-to-face sessions will be held in the first and fifth weeks, respectively. The exercise program includes three levels of difficulty (easy, intermediate and difficult), with patients advancing to subsequent levels once each level is successfully overcome.

OTHER

Standard home-based exercise

8 week home therapeutic exercise program that includes flexibility and strength exercises scheduled through a dossier and an exercise diary. The program will be carried out with a frequency of 3 weekly sessions, preferably on alternate days. The program will be carried out with the support of an information dossier of the exercises to be performed and a monitoring diary in which everything related to the sessions carried out will be noted.. As an addition to the home sessions, two face-to-face sessions will be held in the first and fifth weeks, respectively. The exercise program includes three levels of difficulty (easy, intermediate and difficult), with patients advancing to subsequent levels once each level is successfully overcome.