The Top Manchester Knee Osteoarthritis Treatment: Exercise

Knee pain…the chance that you have or will have knee pain or know someone who suffers with knee pain is high. Knee pain caused by osteoarthritis is a common condition around the world. Manchester Chiropractic & Sports Injuries promotes exercise to our our Manchester chiropractic knee pain patients. We are well aware that we come across sounding like a broken record when it comes to exercise, but exercise remains ‘king’ when it comes to knee pain care! And other new knee pain studies tout a few new treatment approaches to try, too.

OSTEOARTHRITIS

Osteoarthritis (OA) is a disease of degenerated cartilage or wear and tear damage to cartilage giving rise to disability and other health problems impacting over 500 million adults globally. Hip OA and knee OA are the leading types with knee OA being the most common. The objective of treatment of OA is management and reduction of symptoms, not cure. Drug approaches consist of NSAIDs while non-drug approaches incorporate exercise (walking), aerobic exercise, weight loss, diet, hot/cold therapy, electrotherapy to improve muscle strength and reduce joint pain. Surgery (arthroscopy and joint replacement therapy) was described as a last treatment option. The authors of this paper concluded that precautions to keep joints healthy and disease-free were suitable and essential. (1) Those are desirous goals.

DESIRED RESULTS OF TREATMENT FOR KNEE OA

How do you determine if an intervention is successful to your pain? Your desired outcome is the most important. For osteoarthritis, one of the main diseases that hinders us humans, walking for pleasure was documented by data collected for the Genome Wide Association Study (GWAS) to be statistically significant for tackling knee osteoarthritis at the genetic level. (2) Today’s researchers are also working to define just what “minimal clinically important change” is, what the minimum improvement a patient like you would perceive or say made going through the treatment was worth it. For patients with osteoarthritis who went through non-surgical treatments, the amount of knee flexion they could perform after treatment was from 3.8 to 6.4 degrees. Other pertinent information researchers uncovered from the 72 studies they examined was that a rise in flexion was associated with lessened pain and improved function. (3) These are positive outcomes!

…AND WHAT ABOUT PLASMA-RICH PLATELET THERAPY?

In the non-surgical realm of treatment for knee osteoarthritis, platelet rich plasma (PRP)  injection has grown in availability alongside traditional exercise for knee OA pain. A randomized control trial compared three treatment combos PRP injection alone (three weekly injections), exercise alone (6 weeks program/12 sessions of strengthening and functional exercise), and PRP with exercise. At 24 weeks post treatments, the PRP didn’t impact pain in mild-to-mode knee OA patients compared to exercise alone. As a matter of fact, the exercise alone group outcomes were clinically superior for function and health related quality of life. Even though the PRP added cost to the combined treatment, it did not show itself to be better than exercise alone either. The researchers ended their paper with the statement that exercise alone was recommended to reduce pain and improve function. (4) Certainly, more studies will continue to reveal the impact of such treatments as PRP.

CONTACT Manchester Chiropractic & Sports Injuries

Listen to this PODCAST on Osteoarthritis of the Knee with Dr. Luigi Albano on The Back Doctors Podcast with Dr. Michael Johnson as he details the effective gentle, adapted protocols of The Cox® Technic System of Spinal Pain Management in treating the osteoarthritic knee! A beneficial, relieving treatment approach to incorporate with exercise!

Make your Manchester chiropractic appointment soon. From what we read, it looks like exercise is still ‘king’ when managing osteoarthritis of the knee. We can help you find the right exercises and even incorporate some distraction to help the knee.

 
Manchester knee osteoarthritis 
« View All Featured Exercises
"This information and website content is not intended to diagnose, guarantee results, or recommend specific treatment or activity. It is designed to educate and inform only. Please consult your physician for a thorough examination leading to a diagnosis and well-planned treatment strategy. See more details on the DISCLAIMER page. Content is reviewed by Dr. James M. Cox I."