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Correlation of Pain, Obesity and Fertility Potential.

N

Northern Orthopaedic Division, Denmark

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Overweight and Obesity

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02168517
N-20140025

Details and patient eligibility

About

The overall aim of the study is to investigate if patients with musculoskeletal chronic pain have reduced semen quality in comparison with age matched healthy controls. Secondly, the aim is to investigate whether overweight with or without chronic pain are related to reduced semen quality. We will investigate semen quality in obese chronic pain patients, normal weight chronic pain patients and in obese and normal weight healthy controls.

Full description

Obesity is associated with several disorders including chronic musculoskeletal pain. For example obesity has been implicated in the development or progression of low back pain and knee osteoarthritis. The mechanism by which obesity causes lumbar back pain is poorly understood, but the contribution of both mechanical and system factors is likely. Direct mechanical stress on the intervertebral discs and adjacent structures are suspected to be mechanisms through which obesity affects the spine, leading to subsequent low back pain. The link between obesity and knee osteoarthritis has also been demonstrated, but potential factors underlying the association of obesity with knee osteoarthritis has not entirely been elucidated.

It is a well-known fact that obesity leads to an excess load on the joint, increased cartilage turnover, increased collagen type 2 degradation products and increased risk of degenerative meniscal lesions. Although all of these factors have been proposed to lead to knee osteoarthritis, no causal relationship has been demonstrated.

Enrollment

120 estimated patients

Sex

Male

Ages

18 to 45 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Men between 18-45 years with low back pain or knee pain recruited among referees to the orthopaedic outpatient clinics at Aalborg University Hospital
  • Pain more than 3 months
  • Patients can be on a daily use of Paracetamol 1 gram x 4, NSAID x 3-4 or combined
  • Patients will be included regardless of their BMI but will be put in their respective BMI subgroup after the required measurements have been taken
  • Regarding low back pain the LBPRS >9, knee pain the KOOS <75 (0-100, i.c. 100 = no problems)
  • Healthy men in the age 18-45 years (matched with enrolled patients)

Exclusion criteria

  • Malignancy
  • Ongoing infection
  • Drug addiction defined as the use of cannabis, opioids or other psycho drugs
  • Previous neurologic, musculoskeletal or mental diseases
  • Lack of ability to cooperate
  • Pain rating
  • Patients with a pain rate below 3
  • Medication
  • Patients taking Morphine drugs

Trial design

120 participants in 4 patient groups

Group I
Description:
Overweight osteoarthritis patients
Group II
Description:
Normal weight osteoarthritis patients.
Group III
Description:
Overweight healthy men.
Group IV
Description:
Normal weight healthy men.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Hans I. Nielsen, PhD; Sten Rasmussen, M.D.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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