| Literature DB >> 19638215 |
Stephen P Messier1, Claudine Legault, Shannon Mihalko, Gary D Miller, Richard F Loeser, Paul DeVita, Mary Lyles, Felix Eckstein, David J Hunter, Jeff D Williamson, Barbara J Nicklas.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Obesity is the most modifiable risk factor, and dietary induced weight loss potentially the best nonpharmacologic intervention to prevent or to slow osteoarthritis (OA) disease progression. We are currently conducting a study to test the hypothesis that intensive weight loss will reduce inflammation and joint loads sufficiently to alter disease progression, either with or without exercise. This article describes the intervention, the empirical evidence to support it, and test-retest reliability data. METHODS/Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19638215 PMCID: PMC2729726 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2474-10-93
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Musculoskelet Disord ISSN: 1471-2474 Impact factor: 2.362
Figure 1Theoretical model by which intensive dietary restriction plus exercise decreases knee joint loads, improves strength and power, and decreases inflammation leading to a slowing of disease progression, reduced pain, improved function, and less disability.
Study Design
| Intensive Dietary Restriction | Exercise | Intensive Dietary Restriction + Exercise |
| N = 150 | N = 150 | N = 150 |
Exclusion criteria
| Significant co-morbid disease that would pose a safety threat or impair ability to participate, previous acute knee injury, patellofemoral OA in the absence of tibiofemoral OA | Symptomatic or severe coronary artery disease; severe HTN; active cancer, other than skin cancer; anemia; dementia; liver disease; COPD; peripheral vascular disease; inability to walk without an assistive device; blindness; osteoporosis, ligament or cartilage damage from acute event; type 1 diabetes; type 2 diabetes on thiazolidinediones agents; patellofemoral OA without tibiofemoral OA. | Medical history; physical exam; GXT; knee x-ray sunrise view |
| Ability and willingness to modify dietary or exercise behaviors | Unwillingness or inability to change eating and physical activity habits due to environment; cannot speak and read English | Questionnaire, assessment by interventionists |
| Excess alcohol use | ≥ 21 drinks per week | Questionnaire |
| Inability to finish 18-month study or unlikely to be compliant | Lives > 50 miles from site or planning to leave area ≥ 3 months during the next 18 months | Questionnaire |
| Conditions that prohibit knee MRI | Pacemaker, severe claustrophobia, defibrillator, implanted metal objects in leg, neurostimulator, magnetic aneurysm clip, any kind of metal implant or foreign metal objects in the body, such as bullets, shrapnel, metal slivers | Medical history |
| Significant cognitive impairment or depression | diagnosis of dementia or a Modified Mini-Mental State exam (3MSE) score < 70, CES-D score > 17 | Medical history, 3MSE, CES-D |
Figure 2Participant eligibility and screening.
Test-retest reliability (ICC) of selected gait variables for all subjects (n = 21) and in tertiles of BMI (kg/m2)
| Gait variable | All Subjects | 34 < BMI ≤ 41 | 32 ≤ BMI ≤ 34 | 27 ≤ BMI < 32 |
| Knee Extensor Moment | 0.86 | 0.80 | 0.72 | 0.94 |
| Knee Abductor Moment | 0.94 | 0.95 | 0.97 | 0.86 |
| Knee Compressive Force | 0.95 | 0.90 | 0.95 | 0.98 |
| Vertical GRF | 0.98 | 0.92 | 0.95 | 0.99 |
| Stride length | 0.95 | 0.69 | 0.97 | 0.99 |
Figure 3Test-retest reliability for knee joint loads calculated during gait. (A) Knee flexion/extension moment with an ICC = 0.86, and (B) Knee compressive forces with an ICC = 0.95.
Intra-observer reliability for reading of MRI BLOKS features (weighted kappa)
| BML size | 0.72 |
| BML % area | 0.67 |
| % of lesion BML | 0.79 |
| Cartilage 1 morphology | 0.95 |
| Cartilage 2 | 0.93 |
| Osteophyte | 0.74 |
| Synovitis | 0.66 |
| Effusion | 0.77 |
| Meniscal extrusion | 0.95 |
| Meniscus tear/cysts | 0.99 |
BLOKS = Boston Leeds Osteoarthritis Knee Score
BML = Bone Marrow Lesion
Figure 4Baseline double oblique coronal MR image acquired using a fat suppressed SPGR sequence with a 1.5 mm slice thickness and 0.31 mm × 0.31 mm in plane resolution. The area of the cartilage surface (AC) and the total subchondral bone area (tAB) are manually segmented in the medial tibia (MT) and weight-bearing medial femur (cMF). The part of the tAB covered by AC is defined as the cartilaginous area of bone (cAB), that not covered by the AC as the denuded area of bone (dAB).
Figure 5Flow chart visualizing the image analysis and quality control (QC process).
Figure 63D visualization of the femorotibial subregions: Top: anterior view with the medial tibia being divided into 5 subregions (red = central, green = external, dark blue = internal, yellow = posterior, and turquoise = anterior subregion. The central subregion is defined by a cylinder and occupies 20% of the total subchondral bone area of medial tibia (MT). The weight bearing femur is divided into three strip-like subregions, each occupying 33.3% of the subchondral bone area (green = central, dark blue = internal, red = external subregion). The total subchondral bone area of the lateral tibia is shown in green and that of the lateral femur in red. Middle: oblique anterior-superior view of the subregions. Bottom: superior view onto the tibial subregions (femur not shown).