| Literature DB >> 35594623 |
Vitor Santos Cortez1, Walter Augusto Moraes1, João Victor Taba1, Alberto Condi1, Milena Oliveira Suzuki1, Fernanda Sayuri do Nascimento1, Leonardo Zumerkorn Pipek1, Vitoria Carneiro de Mattos1, Matheus Belloni Torsani1, Alberto Meyer2, Wu Tu Hsing3, Leandro Ryuchi Iuamoto4.
Abstract
The objective of this study is to compare the effectiveness of dextrose-prolotherapy with other substances for pain relief in patients with primary knee osteoarthritis. The literature screening was done in January 2021 through Medline (PubMed), EMBASE, and Database of the National Institute of Health based on the following criteria: randomized clinical trials that subjected patients with primary knee osteoarthritis who underwent treatment with dextrose-prolotherapy and other substances for pain relief. Paired reviewers independently identified 3381 articles and included 8 trials that met the eligibility criteria. According to the findings of this review, participants that underwent dextrose-prolotherapy showed improvements between baseline and posterior assessments and when compared to saline injections, but when compared to other substances, the results were not clear. Although dextrose-prolotherapy is a useful treatment method by itself, it is still not possible to clearly affirm that it is superior or inferior to its counterparts. There is an urgent need for further studies to bring more evidence to the field.Entities:
Keywords: Dextrose; Knee; Osteoarthritis; Pain; Prolotherapy
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35594623 PMCID: PMC9123214 DOI: 10.1016/j.clinsp.2022.100037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clinics (Sao Paulo) ISSN: 1807-5932 Impact factor: 2.898
Fig. 1Research flow.
Fig. 2Graph of risk analysis of general bias in articles.
Fig. 3Summary of risk analysis of general articles bias.
Demographic characteristics of the studies.
| Author (publication year, country) | Initial number of participants | Mean age (years) (SD) | Sex (male/female) | Mean BMI (kg/m²) (SD) | KOA grade |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Delgado et al. | Total: 42 | D-PRL: 64.3 ± 5.31 | D-PRL: 11/10 | D-PRL: 28.3 ± 1.9 | Grade 1‒2 |
| D-PRL: 21 | PRP: 65.6 ± 6.64 | PRP: 10/11 | PRP: 28.6 ± .8 | ||
| PRP: 21 | |||||
| Boonstra et al. | Total: 66 | D-PRL: 55.7 (6.6) | D-PRL: 3/18 | D-PRL: 30 (4.6) | Grade 2‒3 |
| D-PRL: 22 | Saline: 54.4 (7.3) | Saline: 2/20 | Saline: 32.3 (3.7) | ||
| Saline: 22 | CG: 52 (6.1) | CG: 2/17 | CG: 27.6 (4.0) | ||
| CG: 22 | |||||
| Rejeski et al. | Total: 120 | D-PRL: 64.8 (5.8) | D-PRL: 11/19 | D-PRL: 32.4 (4.1) | Grade 3‒4 |
| D-PRL: 30 | Physical therapy: 70 (6.3) | Physical therapy: 12/18 | Physical therapy: 33.2 (3.9) | ||
| Physical therapy: 30 | |||||
| Botulinum neurotoxin: 67.7 (7.3) | Botulinum neurotoxin: 8/22 | Botulinum neurotoxin: 31.8 (4.7) | |||
| Botulinum neurotoxin: 30 | |||||
| HA: 30 | HA: 66.1 (9.1) | HA: 14/16 | HA: 32.6 (2.5) | ||
| Vaishya et al. | Total: 90 | D-PRL:56.8 (7.9) | D-PRL: 11/19 | ≤ 25: 10 D-PRL; 8 Saline; 6 EP | 1. Grade 1‒2 |
| D-PRL: 30 | Saline: 56.8 (6.7) | Saline: 9/20 | D-PRL: 11 | ||
| Saline: 29 | EP: 56.4 (7.0) | EP: 10/21 | 25‒30: 6 D-PRL; 11 Saline; 12 EP | Saline: 12 | |
| EP: 31 | Exercise: 9 | ||||
| ≥ 30: 14 D-PRL; 10 Saline; 13 EP | 2. Grade 3‒4 | ||||
| D-PRL:14 | |||||
| Saline: 9 | |||||
| Exercise: 14 | |||||
| Copsey et al. | Total: 70 | D-PRL: 60.57 (7.47) | D-PRL: 10/16 | Not reported | Grade 1‒3 |
| D-PRL: 26 | Erythropoietin: 61.15 (7.47) | Erythropoietin: 9/11 | |||
| Erythropoietin: 20 | Pulsed radiofrequency: 56.95 (8.31) | Pulsed radiofrequency: 11/13 | |||
| Pulsed radiofrequency: 24 | |||||
| Fransen and Edmonds | Total: 104 | D-PRL: 61.2 ± 11.5 | D-PRL: 29/25 | D-PRL: 30.7 ± 1.2 | Grade 2‒4 |
| D-PRL: 52 | HA: 63.7 ± 12.2 | HA: 33/21 | HA: 29.5 ± 1.3 | ||
| HA: 52 | |||||
| Roos and Lohmander | Total: 92 | D-PRL: 57.90 (1.62) | D-PRL: 15/15 | 1. D-PRL: Normal (18.50–25.00): 9; Overweight (25.01–30.00): 14; Obese class I (> 30.01): 7 | 1. Grade 2: D-PRL: 7; PRP: 5; Autologus Conditioned Serum: 6 |
| D-PRL: 30 | PRP: 58.93 (1.71) | PRP: 16/14 | |||
| PRP: 30 | Autologus Conditioned Serum: 61.28 (1.67) | Autologus Conditioned Serum: 12/20 | |||
| Autologus Conditioned Serum: 32 | |||||
| 2. PRP: Normal (18.50–25.00): 5; Overweight (25.01–30.00): 13; Obese class I (> 30.01): 12 | 2. Grade 3: D-PRL: 12; PRP: 16; Autologus Conditioned Serum: 9 | ||||
| 3. Autologus Conditioned Serum: Normal (18.50–25.00): 4; Overweight (25.01–30.00): 11; Obese class I (> 30.01): 17 | 3. Grade 4: D-PRL: 11; PRP: 9; Autologus Conditioned Serum: 17 | ||||
| p = 0.150 | |||||
| Ware | Total 76 | D-PRL: 62.8 (5.8) | D-PRL: 11/27 | D-PRL: 24.0 (3.4) | Grade 0-4: 57 were Grade 2‒3 |
| D-PRL: 38 | |||||
| Saline: 38 | Saline: 63.7 (5.2) | Saline: 11/27 | Saline: 25.0 (3.3) |
Measured by Kellgren-Lawrence scale of the Radiological Society of America.
OA, Osteoarthritis; D-PRL, Dextrose Prolotherapy; PRP, Platelet-Rich Plasma; CG, Control-Group; EP, Exercise Program; HA, Hyaluronic Acid; Autologus Conditioned Serum, Autologus Conditioned Serum.
Methodological characteristics of the studies.
| Author (publication year, country) | Group design | Time of interventions | Main parameters (score range) | Time of assessments |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Delgado et al. | 1. D-PRL: 7 mL 25% | One IAI at 0 and 1 months | 1. WOMAC | 0, 1, 2 and 6 months |
| 2. PRP: 7 mL | a. Pain level (0‒20) | |||
| b. Stiffness (0‒8) | ||||
| c. Functional limitations (0‒68) | ||||
| d. Total score (0‒96) | ||||
| Boonstra et al. | 1. D-PRL + EP | One IAI and EAI at 0, 3 and 6 weeks | 1. WOMAC | 0, 6 and 18 weeks |
| a. IAI: 5 mL 25% (4 mL 30% dextrose + 1 mL 0.9% sodium chloride) | a. Pain level (0‒20) | |||
| b. Stiffness (0‒8) | ||||
| c. Functional limitations (0‒68) | ||||
| b. EAI: 10 mL 15% (5 mL 30% dextrose + 2.5 mL 0.9% sodium chloride + 2.5 mL 0.1% lidocaine) | d. Total score (0‒96) | |||
| 2. VAS | ||||
| a. Pain activity (0‒10) | ||||
| b. Stiffness (0‒10) | ||||
| 3. SF-36 | ||||
| 2. Saline + EP | a. PCS (0‒100) | |||
| a. IAI: 2.5 mL 0.9% sodium chloride + 2.5 mL 0.1% lidocaine | ||||
| b. EAI: 5 mL 0.9% sodium chloride + 5 mL 0.1% lidocaine | ||||
| 3. CG: home-based EP | ||||
| Rejeski et al. | 1. D-PRL + EP: 8 mL 20% dextrose + 2 mL 2% lidocaine | 1. Three IAI 1 month apart | 1. VAS | 0, 1 and 4 weeks, and 3 months |
| a. Subjective pain (0‒10) | ||||
| 2. 25 min per exercise session | 2. KOOS | |||
| 2. Physical therapy + EP | a. Patients’ opinion of knee and associated problems (0‒100) | |||
| 3. Botulinum neurotoxin A + EP: 100 units + 5 mL normal saline | 3. One IAI | |||
| 4. Three IAI 1 week apart | ||||
| 4. HA + EP: 2 mL | ||||
| Vaishya et al. | 1. D-PRL | 1. Three IAI at 1, 5 and 9 weeksa | 1. WOMAC | 0, 5, 9, 12, 26 and 52 weeks |
| a. IAI: 5 mL 50% dextrose + 5 mL lidocaine + 1% saline | a. Pain level (0‒20) | |||
| b. Stiffness (0‒8) | ||||
| c. Functional limitations (0‒68) | ||||
| b. EAI: 6.75 mL 50% dextrose + 4.5 mL 1% lidocaine + 1% saline | 2. Three IAI at 1, 5 and 9 weeks* | |||
| d. Total score (0‒96) | ||||
| 2. KPS | ||||
| 2. Saline | 3. 3‒5 sessions per week over 20 weeks | a. Knee pain frequency (0‒4) | ||
| a. IAI: 5 mL 0.9% sodium chloride + 5 mL 1% lidocaine | ||||
| * Optional sessions at 13 and 17 weeks | b. Severity (0‒5) | |||
| b. EAI: 18 mL 0.9% sodium chloride + 4.5 mL 1% lidocaine | ||||
| 3. EP | ||||
| Copsey et al. | 1. D-PRL: 5 mL dextrose 25% + 5 mL 0.5% ropivacaine | 1. One IAI | 1. VAS | 0, 2, 4 and 12 weeks |
| 2. One IAI | a. Subjective pain (0‒10) | |||
| 3. One 15 min session | 2. ROM | |||
| 2. Erythropoietin: 5 mL 0.5% ropivacaine + 4000 IU erythropoietin | a. Knee joint range of motion values determined through goniometric method were recorded in the pertinent forms | |||
| 3. Pulsed radiofrequency | ||||
| Fransen and Edmonds | 1. HA: 2.5 mL | 1. Three IAI at 0, 7 and 14 days | 1. WOMAC | 0 and 3 months |
| 2. D-PRL: 10 mL 12.5% | a. Total score (0‒96) | |||
| 2. VAS | ||||
| 2. Three EAI at 0, 7 and 14 days | a. Pain activity (0‒10) | |||
| Roos and Lohmander | 1. D-PRL: 2 mL 50% dextrose + 2 mL bacteriostatic water + 1 mL 2% lidocaine | 1. IAI once a week for 3 weeks | 1. WOMAC | 0, 1 and 6 months |
| a. Total score (0‒96) | ||||
| 2. IAI two times every 7 days | 2. VAS | |||
| 2. PRP: 20 mL | a. Pain activity (0‒96) | |||
| 3. Autologus Conditioned Serum: 2 mL derived from 20 mL of blood from each patient | 3. IAI two times every 7 days | |||
| Ware | 1. D-PRL: 5 mL 25% (2.5 mL 50% dextrose + 2.5 mL sterile water) | 1. IAI at 0, 4, 8, and 16 weeks | 1. WOMAC | 0, 16*, 26 and 52 weeks |
| a. Pain level (0‒20) | ||||
| 2. IAI at 0, 4, 8, and 16 weeks | b. Stiffness (0‒8) | * EuroQol-5D was not assessed | ||
| 2. Saline: 5 mL | c. Functional limitations (0‒68) | |||
| d. Total score (0‒96) | ||||
| 2. VAS | ||||
| a. Pain intensity (0‒100) | ||||
| 3.EuroQol-5d | ||||
| a. VAS (0‒100) | ||||
| b. Total score | ||||
| 4. Timed up and go | ||||
| 5. 30 s chair stand | ||||
| 6. 40 m fast-paced walk |
D-PRL, Dextrose Prolotherapy; PRP, Platelet-Rich Plasma; CG, Control-Group; WOMAC, Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index; VAS, visual analog scale; SF-36, Short-Form 36; PCS, Physical Component Summary; MSC, Mental Component Summary; KOOS, Knee Injury and Osteoarthritis Outcome Score; EP, Exercise Program; IAI, Intra-Articular Injections; EAI, Extra-Articular Injection; ROM, Range of joint Motion.
Main results and conclusions of the studies.
| Author (publication year, country) | Baseline assessment main results (score range) (SD) | Post-intervention last assessment main results (score range) (SD) | Study conclusions | Funding |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Delgado et al. | 1. WOMAC Pain level (0‒20) ( | 6 months: | PRP was more effective when compared to D-PRL and no significant side effects was observed | Not reported |
| a. D-PRL: 14.6 ± 1.4 | a. D-PRL: 14.6 ± 1.4 | |||
| b. PRP: 14.8 ± 1.5 | b. PRP: 14.8 ± 1.5 | |||
| 2. WOMAC Stiffness (0‒8) ( | 2. WOMAC Stiffness (0‒8) ( | |||
| a. D-PRL: 5.2 ± 1.3 | a. D-PRL: 5.2 ± 1.3 | |||
| b. PRP: 5.4 ± 1.2 | b. PRP: 5.4 ± 1.2 | |||
| 3. WOMAC Functional limitations (0‒68) ( | 3. WOMAC Functional limitations (0‒68) ( | |||
| a. D-PRL: 43.3 ± 6.7 | a. D-PRL: 43.3 ± 6.7 | |||
| b. PRP: 47.8 ± 4.7 | b. PRP: 47.8 ± 4.7 | |||
| 4. Total WOMAC (0‒96) ( | 4. Total WOMAC (0‒96) ( | |||
| a. D-PRL: 67.1 ± 7.9 | a. D-PRL: 67.1 ± 7.9 | |||
| b. PRP: 67.9 ± 7.3 | b. PRP: 67.9 ± 7.3 | |||
| Boonstra et al. | 1. Total WOMAC (0‒96) ( | 18 weeks: | D-PRL may become a promising method for KOA treatment | Scientific Research Projects Unit of the Istanbul University (ID: 41877) |
| 1. Total WOMAC (0‒96) | ||||
| a. D-PRL: 68.7 (11.4) | a. D-PRL: 32.7 (11.6) | |||
| b. Saline: 69.2 (17.6) | b. Saline: 46.7 (13.5) | |||
| c. CG: 68.9 (11.9) | c. CG: 59.8 (10.7) | |||
| 2. VAS Pain activity (0‒10) ( | 2. VAS Pain activity (0‒10) | |||
| a. D-PRL: 7.2 (1.0) | a. D-PRL: 1.1 (1.9) | |||
| b. Saline: 7.4 (2.0) | b. Saline: 4.6 (1.8) | |||
| c. CG: 7.0 (0.9) | c. CG: 4.5 (2.0) | |||
| 3. SF-36 PCS (0‒100) ( | 3. SF-36 PCS (0‒100) | |||
| a. D-PRL: 34.1 (8.9) | a. D-PRL: 48.5 (7.5) | |||
| b. Saline: 30 (7.4) | b. Saline: 39.6 (8.5) | |||
| c. CG: 35 (9.3) | c. CG: 41.1 (11.7) | |||
| Rejeski et al. | 1. VAS Subjective pain (0‒10) ( | 3 months: | D-PRL or botulinum neurotoxin type A could be effective first-line treatments. Physical therapy can be useful if patient is not willing to continue regular therapeutic programs | None |
| 1. VAS Subjective pain: Botulinum neurotoxin and D-PRL were better pain management therapies, while HA was the least efficient method | ||||
| a. D-PRL: 6.5 (1.3) | ||||
| b. Physical therapy: 7.2 (1.1) | ||||
| c. Botulinum neurotoxin: 6.6 (1.6) | ||||
| d. HA: 6.7 (0.7) | 2. KOOS: Botulinum neurotoxin and D-PRL scores were reduced more than physical therapy (non-statistically significant difference), while HA was the least efficient method | |||
| 2. KOOS (0-100) ( | ||||
| a. D-PRL: 99.4 (13.7) | ||||
| b. Physical therapy: 94 (15.1) | ||||
| c. Botulinum neurotoxin: 93.3 (16.8) | ||||
| d. HA: 89.9 (14.3) | ||||
| Vaishya et al. | 1. WOMAC Pain level ( | 52 weeks: | D-PRL was more effective when compared to Saline and EP | National Institutes of Health: National Center for Complementary and Alternative Medicine (5K23AT001879-02) |
| a. D-PRL: 66.8 (14.9) | 1. WOMAC Pain level mean score change | |||
| b. Saline: 62.7 (14.3) | ||||
| c. EP: 63.2 (13.1) | a. D-PRL: 14.18 (SE 3.62) | |||
| 2. WOMAC Stiffness (p = 0.49) | b. Saline: 7.38 (SE 3.67) | |||
| a. D-PRL: 57.1 (19.9) | c. EP: 9.24 (SE 3.63) | |||
| b. Saline: 53.9 (14.2) | 2. WOMAC Stiffness mean score change | |||
| c. EP: 55.3 (18.0) | ||||
| 3. WOMAC Functional limitations ( | a. D-PRL: 15.55 (SE 4.66) | |||
| b. Saline: 9.97 (SE 3.67) | ||||
| c. EP: 8.31 (SE 4.68) | ||||
| a. D-PRL: 65.2 (15.8) | 3. WOMAC Functional limitations mean score change ( | |||
| b. Saline: 67.6 (17.5) | ||||
| c. EP: 61.9 (12.7) | ||||
| 4. Total WOMAC ( | a. D-PRL: 16.25 (SE 3.39) | |||
| b. Saline: 5.46 (SE 3.44) | ||||
| a. D-PRL: 63.1 (15.0) | c. EP: 7.31 (SE 3.4) | |||
| b. Saline: 62.7 (14.3) | 4. Total WOMAC mean score change ( | |||
| c. EP: 60.5 (11.3) | ||||
| a. D-PRL: 15.32 (SE 3.32) | ||||
| b. Saline: 7.59 (SE 3.36) | ||||
| c. EP: 8.24 (SE 3.33) | ||||
| Copsey et al. | 1. VAS Subjective pain (0‒10) ( | 12 weeks: | Erythropoietin was more effective than D-PRL or pulsed radiofrequency | Not reported |
| 1. VAS Subjective pain (0‒10) ( | ||||
| a. D-PRL: 7.11 (1.03) | ||||
| b. Erythropoietin: 6.65 (0.96) | a. D-PRL: 5.53 (1.60) | |||
| c. Pulsed radiofrequency: 7.08 (1.08) | b. Erythropoietin: 3.50 (1.23) | |||
| 2. ROM ( | c. Pulsed radiofrequency: 5.50 (1.93) | |||
| a. D-PRL: 101 (1.36) | 2. ROM ( | |||
| b. Erythropoietin: 98.08 (1.60) | a. D-PRL: 113 (2.16) | |||
| c. Pulsed radiofrequency: 95 (1.97) | b. Erythropoietin: 123 (1.53) | |||
| c. Pulsed radiofrequency: 113 (2.16) | ||||
| Fransen and Edmonds | 1. VAS Pain instensity (0‒10) | 1. VAS Pain intensity (0‒10) ( | Both methods had positive results, but HA was more effective than D-PRL in pain and symptoms control | Not reported |
| a. D-PRL: 7.8 ± 1.4 | a. D-PRL: 2.5 ± 1.1 | |||
| b. HA: 8.2 ± 1.7 | b. HA: 2.1 ± 0.6 | |||
| 2. Total WOMAC (0‒96) | 2. Total WOMAC (0‒96) ( | |||
| a. D-PRL: 52.7 ± 9.8 | a. D-PRL: 83.7 ± 12.7 | |||
| b. HA: 55.9 ± 10.4 | b. HA: 88.5 ± 15.6 | |||
| Roos and Lohmander | 1. VAS Pain activity (0‒96) ( | 6 months: | Autologus conditioned serum and PRP are more effective than D-PRL | Physical Medicine and rehabilitation Reseach center, Tabriz University of Medical Sciences (Grant no. 63138) |
| 1. VAS Pain activity (0‒96) | ||||
| a. D-PRL: 67.00 (2.50) | a. D-PRL: 63.30 (2.92) | |||
| b. PRP: 61.10 (1.21) | b. PRP: 55.00 (2.27) | |||
| c. Autologus Conditioned Serum: 61.25 (3.44) | c. Autologus Conditioned Serum: 35.00 (3.51) | |||
| 2. Total WOMAC (0‒96) ( | 2. Total WOMAC (0‒96) | |||
| a. D-PRL: 65.93 (1.67) | a. D-PRL: 72.33 (2.57) | |||
| b. PRP: 60.33 (3.70) | b. PRP: 45.67 (3.82) | |||
| c. Autologus Conditioned Serum: 56.28 (3.13) | c. Autologus Conditioned Serum: 34.88 (3.35) | |||
| 5. VAS Pain intensity: | 1. WOMAC Pain | 52 weeks: | D-PRL may be appropriate care for patients with KOA refractory to more conservative care | Chinese University of Hong Kong Direct Grant for Research 2013-14 (HKD 40,000) |
| a. D-PRL: 49.9 (23.1) | 1. WOMAC Pain level | |||
| Difference between groups: -10.98 (-21.36 to -0.61)* | b. Saline: 44.0 (20.4) | Difference between groups: -10.34 (-19.20 to -1.49)* | ||
| 2. WOMAC Stiffness | ||||
| a. D-PRL:48.0 (26.3) | 2. WOMAC Stiffness | |||
| b. Saline: 46.8 (27.0) | Difference between groups: -8.01 (-18.56 to 2.54) | |||
| 3. WOMAC Function | ||||
| a. D-PRL: 49.0 (21.8) | 3. WOMAC Function limitations | |||
| b. Saline: 45.9 (22.1) | Difference between groups: -9.55 (-17.72 to -1.39)* | |||
| 4. Total WOMAC | ||||
| a. D-PRL: 49.1 (21.8) | 4. Total WOMAC | |||
| b. Saline: 45.6 (21.2) | Difference between groups: -9.65 (-17.77 to -1.53)* | |||
| 5. VAS Pain intensity | ||||
| a. D-PRL: 63.1 (21.2) | * | |||
| b. Saline: 60.1 (19.2) |
OA, Osteoarthritis; KOA, Knee Osteoarthritis; D-PRL, Dextrose Prolotherapy; PRP, Platelet-Rich Plasma; CG, Control-Group; WOMAC, Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index; VAS, Visual Analog Scale; SF-36, Short-Form 36; PCS, Physical Component Summary; HRQoL, Health-Realted Quality of Life.
Limitations reported by the studies.
| Author (publication year, country) | Reported limitations |
|---|---|
| Delgado et al. | 1. Lack of CG. |
| 2. Lack of morphological assessment of structures in and around the knee joint. | |
| 3. Small sample size. | |
| 4. Limited timeframe for patient assessment. | |
| Boonstra et al. | 1. Small sample size. |
| 2. Limited timeframe for patient assessment. | |
| 3. Higher number of female patients. | |
| 4. Participants with moderate-to-severe pain level and refractory to conservative therapy. | |
| Rejeski et al. | 1. Limited timeframe for patient assessment. |
| 2. Did not evaluate combined therapy. | |
| Vaishya et al. | 1. Small sample size. |
| 2. Lack of very severe baseline WOMAC scores. | |
| 3. Relative youth of the participants. | |
| 4. Indirect assessment of participant satisfaction. | |
| 5. Radiographs were not avaliable for all participants. | |
| 6. Exclusion of patients taking chronic opioids. | |
| Copsey et al. | 1. Limited follow up time. |
| 2. Lack of literature on intra-articular prescription of erythropoietin. | |
| Fransen and Edmonds | None reported |
| Roos and Lohmander | 1. Limited budget making long-term follow up of 12 or 24 months impossible. |
| 2. Due to the different characteristics of injected materials (color and viscosity), it was not possible to design a double-blinded study. | |
| Ware | 1. Lack of a usual care group may limit the external validity. |
| 2. Exclusion of morbidly obese patients may limit the generalizability of the data. | |
| 3. Treatment of only one painful knee may not reflect the overall efficacy of D-PRL. | |
| 4. Failure to track the amount of exercise and weight loss in each group. | |
| 5. Language and culture differences also limited direct comparisons to other work. |
CG, Control-Group; WOMAC, Western Ontario and McMaster Universities Osteoarthritis Index; D-PRL, Dextrose Prolotherapy.