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Rehabilitation Efficacy of Low-Load Blood Flow Restriction Training for Lateral Patellar Compression Syndrome (LL-BFRT)

P

Peking University

Status

Completed

Conditions

Lateral Patellar Compression Syndrome

Treatments

Behavioral: the regular rehabilitation program
Device: The blood flow limiting pressure band

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06988917
M2024150

Details and patient eligibility

About

The purpose of this study is to understand the effect of low-load blood flow restriction training on the rehabilitation effect of patients after lateral patellar compression syndrome surgery, and to observe the differences between low-load blood flow restriction training combined with conventional rehabilitation training and conventional rehabilitation training. The main question it aims to answer is:

Can low-load blood flow restriction training improve the rehabilitation effect of patients after surgery for lateral patellar hypertension syndrome? Researchers compared conventional rehabilitation training with conventional rehabilitation training combined with low-load blood-limiting training to explore the effect of blood-limiting training combined with conventional rehabilitation training on the lower extremity function of patients after lateral patellar compression syndrome surgery, providing experimental and theoretical basis for formulating rehabilitation training programs.

Enrollment

60 patients

Sex

All

Ages

30 to 60 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  1. Aged 30-60 years with a Visual Analog Scale (VAS) score ≥3;
  2. Diagnosed with lateral patellar compression syndrome confirmed by MRI and clinical evaluation, having undergone arthroscopic lateral retinacular release surgery;
  3. Presenting postoperative reduction in thigh circumference on the affected side, accompanied by quadriceps muscle atrophy and decreased muscle strength;
  4. Minimum postoperative duration of ≥2 weeks, with signed informed consent and demonstrated ability to comply with the study protocol.

Exclusion criteria

  1. Patients with concomitant fractures or other ligament injuries (including those with prior ACL reconstruction);
  2. Individuals presenting with severe osteoarthritis or rheumatoid arthritis;
  3. Those with medical histories of deep vein thrombosis, coagulation disorders, vascular diseases, or diabetes mellitus;
  4. Subjects with active infections, malignancies, current pregnancy, or psychiatric disorders.

Trial design

60 participants in 2 patient groups

The experimental group (LL-BFRT group)
Description:
The experimental group (LL-BFRT group) received exercise intervention treatment for 4 weeks, training three times a week, each time lasting for 1 hour. Compared with the control group (conventional rehabilitation group), the movements and intensities of the two groups remained consistent during the exercise intervention. Only the experimental group wore a flow-limiting pressure band for exercise during the intervention. The blood flow limiting pressure band used in this study mainly consists of a 109\*10cm leg pressure band, a barometric display dial with a pressure range of 0-300mmHg, and a pressure pump. In the experiment, we fixed the blood flow restriction pressure band in the area for measuring the circumference and adjusted the blood flow restriction pressure according to the thigh circumference of the subjects to maintain it within the range of 40%-60% arterial occlusion pressure. The way to limit blood flow is intermittent inflation.
Treatment:
Device: The blood flow limiting pressure band
Behavioral: the regular rehabilitation program
The control group (conventional rehabilitation group)
Description:
The control group (conventional rehabilitation group) received exercise intervention treatment for 4 weeks, with training three times a week, each lasting for 1 hour. The specific intervention contents are: Each training session consists of a 10-minute warm-up (including power cycling, full-body stretching, etc.) At the same time, use the foam axis to relax the lateral oblique femoris and iliotibial band to relieve the pressure on the lateral side of the patella), 40 minutes of formal training (including wall squats with a ball, straight leg raising resistance training, terminal resistance knee extension training, bench kick ball clamping training, and balance training), and 10 minutes of relaxation (using a foam roller, foam axis and other combined techniques to relax the muscles Especially for the lower limb muscles such as the lateral femoris, iliotibial band, and tibialis anterior muscle.
Treatment:
Behavioral: the regular rehabilitation program

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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