ACTIVE NOT RECRUITING
NCT07283237
Enhancing Medial Knee Pain Rehabilitation : A Clinical Trial On The Effectiveness Of Blood Flow Restriction In Combination With Targeted Exercises For Adult With Varus Deformity
Medial knee pain is common in active adults with varus knee alignment and can limit daily and sports activities. Standard physiotherapy can reduce pain and improve function, but strength gains may be suboptimal when patients cannot tolerate high loading due to pain. Blood flow restriction (BFR) training allows muscle strength and hypertrophy improvements at low external loads by partially restricting limb blood flow, thereby reducing joint stress. Although BFR has shown benefits in people with knee osteoarthritis, its effectiveness for medial knee pain associated with varus deformity is not well established.
This randomized controlled trial will investigate whether adding BFR to a targeted strengthening program provides superior outcomes compared with the same exercise program alone in active adults with medial knee pain and mild to moderate varus alignment. Approximately 80 participants aged 30-55 years with BMI 18-25, medial knee pain, Kellgren-Lawrence grade 1-3 osteoarthritis, and Hip-Knee-Ankle angle between \>2° and ≤10° varus will be recruited from an outpatient setting. Participants will be randomly assigned (1:1) to either a specific exercise program (hip adductors/abductors, internal rotators, and knee extensors) or the same program performed with BFR using a pneumatic thigh cuff set at 40-80% limb occlusion pressure. Outcomes, including the Oxford Knee Score (primary), lower-extremity function, pain, quality of life, muscle strength, radiographic alignment, and relapse rates over 12 months, will be assessed at baseline and multiple follow-up points by blinded assessors.
Gender: All
Ages: 30 Years - 55 Years
Knee Osteoarthritis (Mild to Moderate, Medial Compartment)