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The Role of Referred Pain From the Retro Trochanteric Region in Patients With Knee Pain

U

University Hospital of North Norway

Status

Unknown

Conditions

Referred Pain

Treatments

Other: Physiotherapy
Other: Conservative treatment

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT02560259
2015/157(REK)

Details and patient eligibility

About

The role of referred pain from the retro trochanteric region, in patients with knee pain. Defining and quantifying this sub group of knee patients in the investigators list of refered knee patients. Evaluating the effect of treatment. A randomized trial.

Full description

Knee pain is a great problem in the society. Besides obvious and known causes, for which there are increasing understanding and ways to treat, there is still a rather large group of patients in which the symptoms are not easily understood and harder to treat.

This group is often characterized by having symptoms ranging from months to years, having seen several physicians, gone through several x-rays/mri´s, and various treatment with no help.

The investigators find ever more suspicion towards specific mechanisms in the hip region as a source of knee pain. It is well known in pediatric medicine that children with serious disease in the hip often debut with knee pain. This relationship is not so well established in adults.

Pain in the lower extremity can arise from inflammation or strain of the retro trochanteric muscles, and/or more indirectly if these processes impact the sciatic nerve. The later explanation is commonly known as the piriformis syndrome.

Professor Oddmund Johansen has studied this type of pain extensively. In the later years he has found interest in patients with knee pain.

These patients will often have pain with deep palpation to the posterior hip region, when tightening the hip rotators with flexion and adduction, and they will often respond with pain relief, within minutes, when local anesthesia is placed on the distal attachment of the hip rotators on the posterior margin of the greater trochanter. Afterwards, lasting pain relief can be seen with a specified stretching regiment for these muscles.

The investigators will recruit suiting patients from a knee referral list. Inclusion will be based on clinical examination and whether they respond to the injection. After inclusion they will be scored with pain and quality of life forms, randomised in two groups, one with a stretching regime and one with conservative and symptomatic treatment.

There is interest in defining and quantifying this sub group of knee patients. They will be followed up after 3 months, with a new examination and scoring to evaluate the effect of the intervention.

The study will examine how the patients react and comply with the proposed diagnosis and treatment. A cost analysis will also be considered.

Enrollment

40 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

18 to 70 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Knee pain
  • Failure to understand the pain with more conventional diagnosis
  • Symptoms and retrotrochanteric pain with examination
  • Pain relief with retro trochanteric local anaesthetic injection

Exclusion criteria

  • Mental illness
  • Failure to cooperate
  • Not adequate Norwegian language skills
  • Other well known disease explaining symptoms

Trial design

Primary purpose

Treatment

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

40 participants in 2 patient groups, including a placebo group

Physiotherapy Group
Active Comparator group
Description:
Physiotherapy
Treatment:
Other: Physiotherapy
Conservative group
Placebo Comparator group
Description:
Conservative treatment
Treatment:
Other: Conservative treatment

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Anders Hennig, Physician; Oddmund Johansen, Professor

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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