| Literature DB >> 24188276 |
Hu Yan, Youxin Su1, Lidian Chen, Guohua Zheng, Xueyi Lin, Baojun Chen, Bihong Zhou, Qing Zhang.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is becoming increasingly necessary for community health centers to make rehabilitation services available to patients with osteoarthritis of the knee. However, for a number of reasons, including a lack of expertise, the small size of community health centers and the availability of only simple medical equipment, conventional rehabilitation therapy has not been widely used in China. Consequently, most patients with knee osteoarthritis seek treatment in high-grade hospitals. However, many patients cannot manage the techniques that they were taught in the hospital. Methods such as acupuncture, tuina, Chinese medical herb fumigation-washing and t'ai chi are easy to do and have been reported to have curative effects in those with knee osteoarthritis. To date, there have been no randomized controlled trials validating comprehensive traditional Chinese medicine for the rehabilitation of knee osteoarthritis in a community health center. Furthermore, there is no standard rehabilitation protocol using traditional Chinese medicine for knee osteoarthritis. The aim of the current study is to develop a comprehensive rehabilitation protocol using traditional Chinese medicine for the management of knee osteoarthritis in a community health center. METHOD/Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24188276 PMCID: PMC4228261 DOI: 10.1186/1745-6215-14-367
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Figure 1Study flow chart.
Baseline descriptive data
| General data | Agent of the person who conducted test, test start date, the patient’s address, name of accompanying family members and the patient’s telephone number |
| Demographic data of subject | Gender, age, nationality, level of education, profession, height and weight |
| Assessment of knee before test | Visual analogue scale (VAS), knee girth, knee’s range of motion (ROM), manual muscle test (MMT), stair-climbing ability, walking distance, comprehensive effect, average daily amount of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs taken, activities of daily living (ADL), quality of life (QOL), safety assessments and economic evaluation |
| Other | Complications, medication use, previous treatment and duration of KOA symptoms |
TCM rehabilitation based on syndrome using appropriate technology
| Diagnosis of KOA and inclusion and exclusion criteria | Basic rehabilitation: Chinese medical herb fumigation-washing + traditional exercises (developed from simplified t’ai chi and |
| Swelling (mild to moderate by knee girth) | Basic rehabilitation + bloodletting by puncturing and cupping |
| Weak muscle strength (over 3 degrees by MMT) | Basic rehabilitation + |
| Pain (over 5 by VAS) | Basic rehabilitation + acupuncture |
Traditional exercise intervention (developed from simplified t’ai chi and )
| Phase 1: foot and heel jolt | (i) Stand at attention, heel lift up and look forward for 10 seconds |
| (ii) Move the heel back down, tap the ground slightly and keep looking forward | |
| Phase 2: rotate knee | (i) Stand at attention, slightly bend knees, put hands on the ipsilateral knees and look forward |
| (ii) Circular movement of knee | |
| Phase 3: heel kick | (i) Lie down with leg bent and hands lying naturally at the side of the body |
| (ii) Bend at the hip joint and at the knees, extend the back of the ankle for 15 seconds, kick up the heel while moving the toes toward the shin (plantar flexion) and straighten the knee as far as possible. Do this one leg at a time |
intervention
| Bladder meridians | Thumb and fingers rub the points from BL 37 to BL 56 |
| Stomach meridians | Thumb and fingers rub the points from ST 34 to ST 36 |
| Spleen meridians | Thumb and fingers rub the point from SP 9 to SP 10 |
| Around the knee | Push the muscle and warm using the palm of the hand and the base of the thumb (the thenar eminence) repeatedly |
Kinesitherapy
| Passive movement | (i) The patient sits on a bed with the limb hanging over the edge of a bed. A rolled towel or pad is placed under the shallow depression at the back of the knee joint (popliteal fossa). |
| (ii) The therapist holds the bottom (distal) of the lower leg and pulls toward the foot for 10 seconds. This is repeated five times consecutively. | |
| (iii) The therapist uses his or her hands to flex and extend the knee. Patients will be informed that this will be a passive motion and may uncomfortable but should not be painful. | |
| Active movement | (i) The participant lies on his or her back, lifts and straightens one leg with a weight attached to the ankle. The heel is lifted so that it is approximately 18 cm above the bed and held in that position for 30 seconds. This is repeated three times consecutively. |
| (ii) The participant lies on his or her back, stretches out the knee and performs a set of 15 quadriceps contractions keeping the leg in the same position. This is repeat twice a day for 4 weeks. |
Summary of measures to be collected
| | |
| Pain | Visual analogue scale (VAS) |
| Swelling | Girth measurement |
| Knee range of motion | Range of motion (ROM) |
| Muscle strength | Manual muscle test (MMT) |
| Walking distance | Six-minute walking test (6 MW) |
| The time to ascend and descend a flight of stairs | Stair-climbing test (SCT) |
| | |
| Pain | Average daily consumption of drugs |
| Activities of daily living | Modified Barthel index (MBI) |
| Quality of life | Medical outcomes short form 36 health questionnaire (SF-36) |
| | |
| Adverse events | Safety assessments |
| Cost | Economic evaluation |