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Stopping OsteoARthritis After an ACL Tear

Osteoarthritis, Knee | Anterior Cruciate Ligament Rupture | Knee Injuries

By 2040, 25% of Canadians will have osteoarthritis, a disabling joint condition. Most people think osteoarthritis only affects older adults, but 50% of the 700,000 Canadian youth who hurt their knee playing sports annually will develop osteoarthritis by 40 years of age. These young people with old knees face knee pain and disability for much of their adult lives, interfering with parenting, work, and recreation. Yet, most do not know about osteoarthritis or how to reduce their risk.

In this clinical trial, people who have torn the Anterior Cruciate ligament in their knee and had reconstruction surgery 9-36 months previously will be randomized to receive either a 6-month virtual education and exercise therapy program called Stop OsteoARthritis (SOAR) or a minimal intervention control program. Researchers will test if those who received the SOAR program have larger gains in knee health, including pain, symptoms, function, and quality of life at 6, 12, and 24 months. Researchers will also use MRIs (baseline and 24 months) to assess how the SOAR program influences knee cartilage degeneration and its cost-effectiveness.

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Conditions de participation

  • Sexe:

    ALL
  • Âges admissibles:

    16 to 35

Critères de participation

Inclusion Criteria:

* Currently live in British Columbia, Canada
* 16-35 years of age (inclusive)
* 9-36-months past a first-time ACLR performed ≤12-months of first-time ACL tear
* Currently not receiving knee care from a health or fitness provider and have no scheduled surgical procedures (any part of the body) that would interfere with exercise during the study.
* Score below a KOOS4 PASS (\<79 points)
* Have daily access to an email address and a computer with internet
* Are willing to wear an activity tracker during the study

Exclusion Criteria:

* Inability to communicate in English
* No medical attention (healthcare provider) time-loss (missed physical activity, sport or work ≥2 occasions) injury to the ACLR knee before the ACL tear
* Previous physician diagnosis of index knee osteoarthritis
* Inflammatory arthritis or other systemic condition
* Lower limb injury, surgery, or intra-articular injection in the past 6-months
* Current pregnancy
* MRI contraindications (i.e., Weight over 400 lbs (MRI machine limit); Pacemaker or any other implanted medical device (i.e., wires, defibrillator, artificial heart valve, an electronic device like a drug infusion pump, electrical stimulator for nerves or bones, coil, catheter, or filter in any blood vessel, ear or eye implant, or stainless steel intrauterine device (IUD); Brain or ferromagnetic aneurysm clip; any other metallic prostheses or shrapnel, bullets, or other metal fragments; injury where a piece of metal lodged in the eye or orbit, or; surgery, medical procedure or tattoos (including tattooed eyeliner) in the last 6 weeks).

Lieu de l'étude

Sea to Sky Orthopaedics
Sea to Sky Orthopaedics
Whistler, British Columbia
Canada

Contactez l'équipe d'étude

Primary Contact

Alex Brooks-Hill, MD

604 9054075
Arthritis Research Canada
Arthritis Research Canada
Vancouver, British Columbia
Canada

Contactez l'équipe d'étude

Primary Contact

Jackie Whittaker, PT, PhD

604 202 1362
Étude parrainée par
University of British Columbia
Participants recherchés
Plus d'informations
ID de l'étude: NCT06195423