Home-Based Leg Dexterity Trainer for Management of Knee Osteoarthritis
Trial Parameters
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Brief Summary
Rationale: Roughly 14 million adults aged 60 or older (10% male/13% female) in the United States experience symptoms of knee osteoarthritis (OA). Knee OA pain progressively impacts aging, reducing mobility and increasing morbidity. Nonsurgical self-management of knee OA includes exercise to promote proper knee mechanics, non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), cortisone injections, and weight loss to reduce pain and retain function. As OA has no cure, self-management progresses to \~1 million joint replacements per year. Critically, home-based devices are lacking for specifically training the low-level proprioceptive and neuromuscular circuitry for proper knee mechanics in a safe, focused, mechanistic way. Such devices would supplement exercises for strength, mobility, and whole-body loading and movement. Initially considered a wear-and-tear condition, knee OA is now understood as a complex disease involving inflammatory responses to mechanical loading and neuromuscular feedback loops among pain, joint damage, and dynamic loading. Home-based exercises remain a primary nonpharmacological and nonsurgical approach to managing chronic pain in OA that fundamentally disrupts proprioception and neuromuscular control of the joint, which accelerates articular degeneration. Neuromuscular Dynamics, LLC has developed a simple, safe, quick, and effective Leg Dexterity System that is portable, wireless, and coupled to HIPAA-compliant cloud analytics. A seated participant uses their foot to compress a platform atop a slender spring, which becomes unstable as it begins to buckle at low forces. The participant must then control their leg dexterity (i.e., via short-latency sensorimotor circuits) to stabilize the unstable dynamic foot-ground interactions. A tablet computer connected to the device provides feedback during use and uploads the participant's activity data to the server for analysis and reporting, accessible to users and clinicians. The investigators have successfully tested Leg Dexterity in control participants in multiple publications. The Leg Dexterity test is safe and poses minimal risk as the forces needed to do it are very low, does not involve full weight- bearing maneuvers, and is performed while seated without the risk of falling. Study: The investigators will conduct a randomized home-based clinical trial in knee OA to demonstrate the efficacy of leg dexterity training to reduce pain and improve function compared to currently prescribed dynamic exercise on a wobble board (a commonly used approach for improving proprioception and balance). Successful completion of this study will justify the adoption of the Leg Dexterity System as an effective at-home supplement to any nonsurgical management of knee OA. The investigators propose a longitudinal double-blind dose-matched trial comparing 8 weeks of leg dexterity training (Treatment using a slender, unstable spring system that engages short-latency sensorimotor control, 42 participants) vs. at-home wobble board exercises (Control, 42 participants) at the Steadman Philippon Research Institute.
Eligibility Criteria
INCLUSION CRITERIA: 1. Age 40 to 85 years 2. Ambulatory in home and community settings 3. History of knee osteoarthritis in one or both knees (Kellgren-Lawrence grade II-IV) 4. Baseline pain of 3-10 points on the target (i.e., more-affected) knee and a pain differential of at least -2 points on the contralateral knee as exhibited by the worst pain score for the previous week (on the 11-point Numeric Rating Scale, NRS/Visual Analog Scale VAS). 5. Capacity to personally give informed consent (consent via a legally authorized representative will not be accepted) and who are willing to comply with all study-related procedures and assessments EXCLUSION CRITERIA: 1. Previous or Planned Knee Surgeries, Procedures, and/or Treatments: 1. Planned surgery on either the contralateral or target knee at any time during the Study period, including pre-and post-training assessments. 2. Within 6 months of signing informed consent has received diagnostic arthroscopy of the target knee or arthroscopic su